No, Charlemagne founded the Carolingian Empire.
He founded what historians call the Carolingian empire. Some people rather loosely refer to it as the Holy Roman Empire. It called itself the Empire of the Romans, which was confusing because it was not the only country of the time to do so.
It was called the Carolingian Empire.
Charlemagne did not find an empire (find, meaning discover). He founded and empire (found, meaning begin building up). The empire he founded is called the Carolingian Empire. Depending on the historian whose works you read, the Carolingian Empire was either the beginning of the Holy Roman Empire, or ancestral to the Holy Roman Empire.
Charlemagne extended the Frankish Kingdom to include Saxony, Lombardy, and other territories, founded the Carolingian Empire, which was the ancestor to the Kingdom of France and the Holy Roman Empire, founded schools, and generally elevated the culture of Western Europe. I would pick him as the single most important person of the Middle Ages.
No, Charlemagne founded the Carolingian Empire.
He founded what historians call the Carolingian empire. Some people rather loosely refer to it as the Holy Roman Empire. It called itself the Empire of the Romans, which was confusing because it was not the only country of the time to do so.
It was called the Carolingian Empire.
Charlemagne did not find an empire (find, meaning discover). He founded and empire (found, meaning begin building up). The empire he founded is called the Carolingian Empire. Depending on the historian whose works you read, the Carolingian Empire was either the beginning of the Holy Roman Empire, or ancestral to the Holy Roman Empire.
He founded what historians call the Carolingian empire. Some people rather loosely refer to it as the Holy Roman Empire. It called itself the Empire of the Romans, which was confusing because it was not the only country of the time to do so.
Charlemagne
the vikings threatened Charlemagne's empire.
The boundaries for the empire of Charlemagne were Aachen, Paris, Rome, Barcelona, and Venice.
Charlemagne extended the Frankish Kingdom to include Saxony, Lombardy, and other territories, founded the Carolingian Empire, which was the ancestor to the Kingdom of France and the Holy Roman Empire, founded schools, and generally elevated the culture of Western Europe. I would pick him as the single most important person of the Middle Ages.
Charlemagne.
The treaty that divided Charlemagne's empire was the Treaty of Verdun.
The three great modern European nations were included in the Charlemagne's Empire were the countries by the name of modern Catalonia, France and western Germany.