Abstract (eng)
The Ottonian family’s ascent to prominence can, amongst other factors, be traced back to their marriage projects. Weddings were especially used to denote the achievement of a higher rank: So far, several researchers have pointed this fact out, but a comparison focused on the marital aspect has failed to materialise. The paper at hand investigates the early Ottonians’ marriage policy and shows that marriages, as well as marriage negotiations and celebrations, were a means of networking in foreign policy. But marriages also concerned dynastic interests, such as succession plans. The marriages of Edgith, Adelheid, and Theophanu to the Ottonian dynasty are compared with each other, keeping the planners’ intentions, as well as the marriage’s executions and consequences in mind. The historiographical accounts of Widukind of Corvey, Hrotsvitha of Gandersheim, Liudprand of Cremona, and Thietmar of Merseburg are the primary sources used in this investigation, who were focused on the Ottonian dynasty’s royal, and later even imperial history in their function as chroniclers. The accounts of each wedding are compared regarding similarities, contradictions, and biases of their respective authors. In due course, this paper explains the importance of familial relations, the spouse’s noble rank, the diplomatic relations between the dynasties involved and the narrative power exerted by portrayals of marriage.