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Charlemagne Dbq

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Charlemagne Dbq
Charlemagne was . He was crowned emperor by Pope Leo III on Christmas Day in A.D 800. According to () he ruled much of Western Europe from 768 to 814. Under his ruling, the Roman Empire experienced arts and education. However, Charlemagne was indeed responsible for the death of many pagans that refused to accept Christianity as their religion.

Paragraph 1: charlamagne and the pagans, he killed them because they refused to convert. ( list other details of why he did this, how he did it,.)
One of Charlemagne's goals was to convert Christianity as the desired religion for the people in his kingdom. This religion was his motivation throughout life. There is no doubt that he was extremely devoted to the church. His mission was to unite all Germans
…show more content…
He gave pagan people two choices: Christianity or death. While he was able to convince them to switch religions, many remained faithful to their past religion. Eventually, Charlemagne was the cause of the death of 4,500 people. state charlemagnes ultimate goals and how the society and mentality was.

However, not everyone had a similar mindset as Charlemagne. The Barbarians refused to incorporate education and religion into their lifestyle. Thus, Charlemagne was determined to build the kingdom as strong as possible, and improve the lives of his people in the kingdom.Why was it wrong for charlamgne to force barbarians.state details
Thousands of pagans were tortured and killed horribly. This was a wrong action that should have been prevented.

Charlemagne's desires were definitely similar to Adolf Hitler; They both shared one common goal which was the death of their people. Hitler was the cause of the death of many Jews; Similar to the death of pagans in Charlemagne's case. I believe that Hitler was descended from Charlemagne. There is no doubt that both of these leaders were a huge impact on History.
On the behalf of my opinion, Charlemagne was indeed wrong for pressuring pagans into Christianity. It is definitely inhumane to kill many people because of one's desires. However, one must respect and remain faithful to The memory of Charlemagne also known as “Charles the Great” still remains

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