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  • Holy Roman Emperor
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  • The objective of this scenario is to claim dominance over the other Duchies by claiming 4 of the 6 the Relics that each team possess. The player controls the Teutonic Army and begins on an island in the center of the map, surrounded on all sides by various Central European enemies. Mining the plentiful stone reserves on Barbarossa's island and using it to construct castles, gates and other defenses on the near side of each of the four entrances onto the island (blocking these off) is the best method to defend the town from the frequent attacks.
  • The Holy Roman Emperor was the elected leader of the First Empire. When elected, the Emperor would be King of the Romans, the Imperator to bess, literally the Emperor-to be or Emperor-elect. This would be prior to his imperial coronation by the Pope (many times, but not always, for many Holy Roman Emperors were Emperor-elects.) The Emperor as King of the Romans would be elected by the seven chief electors of the empire, who would assemble in a secret college. Once elected, they would remain Emperors-to be until being crowned by the Pope. Charles, emperor during the time of the Hasburgs, was the last to be crowned in any way, shape or form, by the pope. So after him, all emperors were emperors-to be.
  • The Holy Roman Emperor was the ruler of the Holy Roman Empire. In 800, Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne as emperor. (PROSE: The Lonely Computer) In an alternate timeline in which all of history occurred at once, Winston Churchill was the Holy Roman Emperor. (TV: The Wedding of River Song)
  • Historically, the Holy Roman Emperor is sole Catholic emperor in Medieval Europe. The title is unavailable in the three canonical scenarios of Crusader Kings. However, a kingdom tag for the Holy Roman Empire exists (HREE).
  • The Holy Roman Emperor - Latin: Imperator Romanus Sacer, French: Saint-Empereur Romain, German: Heiliger Römischer Kaiser, Italian: Sacro Romano Imperatore, etc. - was the elected monarch ruling over the Holy Roman Empire, a Central European state in existence during the Middle Ages and the Early Modern period.
  • The Holy Roman Emperor (German: Römischer Kaiser or Römisch-Deutscher Kaiser, Latin: Romanorum Imperator) was the elected monarch ruling over the many varying numbers of states making up the Holy Roman Empire — a Central European feudal state in existence from the Early Middle Ages (962) into the Early Modern period until its dissolution during the Napoleonic Wars (1806). The Empire, whose Emperor was crowned as King of the Romans was based upon the Germanic territories of the Emperor Charlemagne, and held by tradition to be his successors ruling its successor state.
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dbkwik:ageofempires/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:cybernations/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:tardis/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • The objective of this scenario is to claim dominance over the other Duchies by claiming 4 of the 6 the Relics that each team possess. The player controls the Teutonic Army and begins on an island in the center of the map, surrounded on all sides by various Central European enemies. Mining the plentiful stone reserves on Barbarossa's island and using it to construct castles, gates and other defenses on the near side of each of the four entrances onto the island (blocking these off) is the best method to defend the town from the frequent attacks.
  • Historically, the Holy Roman Emperor is sole Catholic emperor in Medieval Europe. The title is unavailable in the three canonical scenarios of Crusader Kings. However, a kingdom tag for the Holy Roman Empire exists (HREE). The closest equivalent of the Holy Roman Emperor in Crusader Kings is the Emperor trait. Unlike kings, who were crowned by high-ranking archbishops, emperors were crowned by Popes. To become an emperor, a ruler must either hold five king titles or the king titles of Germany, Italy and Burgundy. He must have at least 10 vassals, must not be modest, and must have considerable piety and prestige. The MTTH for Imperial Coronation is 15 years.
  • The Holy Roman Emperor - Latin: Imperator Romanus Sacer, French: Saint-Empereur Romain, German: Heiliger Römischer Kaiser, Italian: Sacro Romano Imperatore, etc. - was the elected monarch ruling over the Holy Roman Empire, a Central European state in existence during the Middle Ages and the Early Modern period. Since the Empire's divine restoration on January 1, 2010 A.D., after an interregnum of two centuries, the Emperor crowned was Louis XXI from the House of Habsburg-Lorraine. On February 8, 2010 he was overthrown and a new Emperor was crowned days later, Justinian I of the House of Justinian.
  • The Holy Roman Emperor (German: Römischer Kaiser or Römisch-Deutscher Kaiser, Latin: Romanorum Imperator) was the elected monarch ruling over the many varying numbers of states making up the Holy Roman Empire — a Central European feudal state in existence from the Early Middle Ages (962) into the Early Modern period until its dissolution during the Napoleonic Wars (1806). The Empire, whose Emperor was crowned as King of the Romans was based upon the Germanic territories of the Emperor Charlemagne, and held by tradition to be his successors ruling its successor state. By convention the first Emperor was taken to be the Saxon king Otto the Great, crowned as Emperor by Pope John XII on February 2, 962, although the Empire itself (as well as the style Holy Roman Emperor) did not come into use until some time later. Some have asserted that the first Emperor was Charlemagne (crowned in 800), but that claim was only made afterwards. Holy Roman Emperors were crowned by the Popes up until the 16th century. The Roman of the Emperor's title was a reflection of the translatio imperii (transfer of rule) principle that regarded the (Germanic) Holy Roman Emperors as the inheritors of the title of Emperor of the Western Roman Empire, a title left unclaimed in the West after the death of Julius Nepos in 480.
  • The Holy Roman Emperor was the elected leader of the First Empire. When elected, the Emperor would be King of the Romans, the Imperator to bess, literally the Emperor-to be or Emperor-elect. This would be prior to his imperial coronation by the Pope (many times, but not always, for many Holy Roman Emperors were Emperor-elects.) The Emperor as King of the Romans would be elected by the seven chief electors of the empire, who would assemble in a secret college. Once elected, they would remain Emperors-to be until being crowned by the Pope. Charles, emperor during the time of the Hasburgs, was the last to be crowned in any way, shape or form, by the pope. So after him, all emperors were emperors-to be.
  • The Holy Roman Emperor was the ruler of the Holy Roman Empire. In 800, Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne as emperor. (PROSE: The Lonely Computer) In an alternate timeline in which all of history occurred at once, Winston Churchill was the Holy Roman Emperor. (TV: The Wedding of River Song)