The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 06 - (From Barbarossa to Dante) by Unknown
page 23 of 539 (04%)
page 23 of 539 (04%)
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The Church had learned its lesson, that without a strong civil
government it could not exist. And perhaps the government had at least partly seen what later ages learned more fully, that without religion _it_ could not exist. Church and state were gentler to each other after that. They realized that, whatever their quarrels, they must stand or fall together. So, in 1273, it was the Pope's insistence that led to the selection of another emperor, Rudolph of Hapsburg. He was one of the lesser nobles, elected by the great dukes so that he should be too feeble to interfere with them. But he did interfere, and overthrew Ottocar of Bohemia, the strongest of them all, and restored some measure of law and tranquillity to distracted Germany. His son he managed to establish as Duke of Austria, and eventually the empire became hereditary in the family; so that the Hapsburgs remained rulers of Germany until Napoleon, that upsetter of so many comfortable sinecures, drove them out. Of Austria they are emperors even to this day.[18] THE TARTARS As though poor, dishevelled Germany had not troubles sufficient of her own, she suffered also in this century from the last of the great Asiatic invasions. About the year 1200 a remarkable military leader, Genghis Khan, appeared among the Tartars, a Mongol race of Northern Asia.[19] He organized their wild tribes and started them on a bloody career of rapine and conquest. He became emperor of China; his hordes spread over India and Persia. |
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