31.30. 30. The same Subject continued.
It is mentioned in the books of
fiefs, that when the Emperor Conrad set out for Rome, the vassals in his
service presented a petition to him that he would please to make a law
that the fiefs which descended to the children should descend also to
the grandchildren; and that he whose brother died without legitimate
heirs might succeed to the fief which had belonged to their common
father.
[196]
This was granted.
In the same place it is said (and we are to remember that those
writers lived at the time of the Emperor Frederick I)
[197]
"that the
ancient jurists had always been of opinion
[198]
that the succession of
fiefs in a collateral line did not extend farther than to
brothers-german, though of late it was carried as far as the seventh
degree, and by the new code they had extended it in a direct line in
infinitum." It is thus that Conrad's law was insensibly extended. All
these things being supposed, the bare perusal of the history of France
is sufficient to demonstrate that the perpetuity of fiefs was
established earlier in this kingdom than in Germany. Towards the
commencement of the reign of the Emperor Conrad II in 1024, things were
upon the same footing still in Germany, as they had been in France
during the reign of Charles the Bald, who died in 877. But such were the
changes made in this kingdom after the reign of Charles the Bald, that
Charles the Simple found himself unable to dispute with a foreign house
his incontestable rights to the empire; and, in fine, that in Hugh
Capet's time the reigning family, stripped of all its demesnes, was no
longer in a condition to maintain the crown.
The weak understanding of Charles the Bald produced an equal
weakness in the French monarchy. But as his brother, Louis, King of
Germany, and some of that prince's successors were men of better parts,
their government preserved its vigour much longer.
But what do I say? Perhaps the phlegmatic constitution, and, if I
dare use the expression, the immutability of spirit peculiar to the
German nation made a longer stand than the volatile temper of the French
against that disposition of things, which perpetuated the fiefs by a
natural tendency, in families.
Besides, the kingdom of Germany was not laid waste and annihilated,
as it were, like that of France, by that particular kind of war with
which it had been harassed by the Normans and Saracens. There were less
riches in Germany, fewer cities to plunder, less extent of coast to
scour, more marshes to get over, more forests to penetrate. As the
dominions of those princes were less in danger of being ravaged and torn
to pieces, they had less need of their vassals and consequently less
dependence on them. And in all probability, if the Emperors of Germany
had not been obliged to be crowned at Rome, and to make continual
expeditions into Italy, the fiefs would have preserved their primitive
nature much longer in that country.
Footnotes
[196]
Book i, of fiefs, tit. 1.
[197]
Cujas has proved it extremely well.