High Middle Ages · Europe · Politics

1032

Burgundy annexed to the Holy Roman Empire

1032

When the childless Rudolph III of Burgundy died, his kingdom passed by treaty to his nephew Conrad II. The Salian emperor now controlled not only Germany and Italy but the alpine approaches from the Mediterranean. The empire reached its greatest medieval extent, stretching from the North Sea to Provence. Control of the Alpine passes gave Conrad a strategic chokehold on trade between northern Europe and Italy.