Feudal fragmentation
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Feudal fragmentation[1] is a process whereby a feudal state is split into smaller regional state structures, each characterized by significant autonomy, if not outright independence, and ruled by a high-ranking noble such as a prince or a duke.[2][3] Feudal fragmentation is usually associated with European history, particularly during the Middle Ages.[4][5]
Feudal fragmentation occurs after the death of the legitimate ruler leaves no clear heirs, and rulers of various subdivisions of the original state fail at electing or agreeing on a new leader for the previous, larger entity. In some cases (for example, the Holy Roman Empire), such a leader may be elected, yet wield much lesser powers than those of his predecessor. Feudal fragmentation is related to the concepts of agnatic seniority and principate.[3]

Seniorate Province.
Pomeranian vassals under the rule of the Seniorate Province.
Examples
Summarize
Perspective
This phenomenon has occurred in the history of several countries and regions:
- In the history of Poland:
- The regionalization[6] or fragmentation of Poland (Polish: rozbicie dzielnicowe) refers to the period following the testament of Bolesław III Wrymouth (1138) that led to the split of the Kingdom of Poland into several mostly independent provinces, unified only by Ladislaus the Short approximately two centuries later, in the early 14th century[2][3][7]
- The fragmentation of the Duchy of Silesia into numerous smaller duchies under the Piast dynasty.
- In the history of Belarus, Russia and Ukraine, the period of fragmentation (Russian: феодальная раздробленность) that started from around the 12th century during the decline of Kievan Rus'. In Russia, it lasted up until the reign of Ivan IV of Russia;[3][8][9] the last appanage Russian prince was Vladimir of Staritsa[10]
- In the history of Bulgaria, the late 14th century fragmentation of the Second Bulgarian Empire[11][12]
- In the history of Hungary, the interregnum (1301–1323), Oligarchs
- In the history of Serbia, the fall of the Serbian Empire (1371–95)
- In the history of Georgia, the collapse of the Georgian realm (starting in the 13th century)
- In the history of Germany, the period described as the Kleinstaaterei lasted from the 13th century (the demise of the Hohenstaufen dynasty of the Holy Roman Empire) to 1871 (the unification of the German states into the German Empire).[3][13][14][15] Many of the smaller states were eliminated during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars but several remained in their aftermath. Even within the German Empire many small states remained: the Ernestine duchies remained divided until the formation of the State of Thuringia in 1920 and others remained until their abolishment under Nazi rule or by the occupying powers after WWII.
- After the extinction of the Duchy of Burgundy, some of its territory was absorbed by France's Louis XI, while its territory in the Low Countries (the Burgundian Netherlands) became the Habsburg Netherlands (also called the Seventeen Provinces), which itself splintered into the Spanish Netherlands and the Dutch Republic[16]
- In the history of France, the period after the fall of the Carolingian dynasty and death of Charlemagne to its unification by Louis XI[17][18][19] (see also Crown lands of France)
- In the history of Italy, the period from the invasion of Italy by the Lombards (which occurred shortly after Italy was united under the Byzantine Empire as a result of the Gothic War) until Italian unification[20]
According to Samir Amin, feudal fragmentation has been mostly a European phenomenon and did not occur in the history of China or Islamic Middle Eastern states.[4][21] At the same time, the term feudal fragmentation has been used in the context of history of China (the Warring States period)[22] and history of Japan (the Sengoku period).[23][24][25]
See also
- Anatolian beyliks, after the decline of Sultanate of Rum
- Balkanization
- Division of the Mongol Empire
- Decentralization
- Division of the Frankish Empire under Charlemagne's successors 843-880 (Treaties of Verdun, Prüm, Meerssen and Ribemont)
- Gavelkind
- Petty kingdom
- Sub-Roman Britain
- Wales in the Early Middle Ages
- the Heptarchy, a period of the history of England characterised by petty kingdoms until their unification into the Kingdom of England in the tenth century
- Sub-Roman Britain
- Rump state
- Taifa periods, after the decline of the Caliphate of Córdoba (1031) and the Almoravid dynasty (1140s)
Notes
References
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