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===Benevento, Bavaria, and Pepin's revolt=== Charlemagne travelled to Italy in 786, arriving by Christmas. Aiming to extend his influence further into southern Italy, he marched into the Duchy of Benevento.{{sfn|Fried|2016|pp=139β140}} [[Arechis II of Benevento|Duke Arechis]] fled to a fortified position at [[Salerno]] before offering Charlemagne his fealty. Charlemagne accepted his submission and hostages, who included Arechis's son [[Grimoald III of Benevento|Grimoald]].{{sfn|Nelson|2019|p=228}} In Italy, Charlemagne also met with envoys from Constantinople. Empress Irene had called the 787 [[Second Council of Nicaea]], but did not inform Charlemagne or invite any Frankish bishops. Charlemagne, probably in reaction to the perceived slight of the exclusion, broke the betrothal of his daughter Rotrude and Constantine VI.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|pp=225β226, 230}} [[File:Grimoald III solidus 74000878.jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|alt=Both sides of an old coin|A ''[[solidus (coin)|solidus]]'' from Benevento, with Grimoald's effigy and Charlemagne's name (DOMS CAR RX, the Lord King Charles)]] After Charlemagne left Italy, Arechis sent envoys to Irene to offer an alliance; he suggested that she send a Byzantine army with Adalgis, the exiled son of Desiderus, to remove the Franks from power in Lombardy.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|p=234}} Before his plans could be finalised, Aldechis and his elder son Romuald died of illness within weeks of each other.{{sfn|Fried|2016|p=142}} Charlemagne sent Grimoald back to Benevento to serve as duke and return it to Frankish suzerainty.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|p=240}} The Byzantine army [[Byzantine expedition to Calabria (788/789)|invaded]], but were repulsed by the Frankish and Lombard forces.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|pp=240β241}} As affairs were being settled in Italy, Charlemagne turned his attention to Bavaria. Bavaria was ruled by Duke [[Tassilo III, Duke of Bavaria|Tassilo]], Charlemagne's first cousin, who had been installed by Pepin the Short in 748.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|pp=186β187}} Tassilo's sons were also grandsons of Desiderius, and a potential threat to Charlemagne's rule in Lombardy.{{sfn|Fried|2016|p=152}} The neighbouring rulers had a growing rivalry throughout their reigns, but had sworn oaths of peace to each other in 781.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|pp=188β190}} In 784, Rotpert (Charlemagne's viceroy in Italy) accused Tassilo of conspiring with Widukind in Saxony and unsuccessfully attacked the Bavarian city of [[Bolzano]].{{sfn|Nelson|2019|pp=213β214}} Charlemagne gathered his forces to prepare for an invasion of Bavaria in 787. Dividing the army, the Franks launched a three-pronged attack. Quickly realizing his poor position, Tassilo agreed to surrender and recognise Charlemagne as his overlord.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|pp=243β244}} The following year, Tassilo was accused of plotting with the [[Pannonian Avars|Avars]] to attack Charlemagne. He was deposed and sent to a monastery, and Charlemagne absorbed Bavaria into his kingdom.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|pp=251β254}} Charlemagne spent the next few years based in [[Regensburg]], largely focused on consolidating his rule of Bavaria and [[Avar Wars|warring against]] the Avars.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|p=294}} Successful campaigns against them were launched from Bavaria and Italy in 788,{{sfn|Nelson|2019|p=257}} and Charlemagne led campaigns in 791 and 792.{{sfn|Fried|2016|p=157}} Charlemagne gave Charles the Younger rule of [[Maine (province)#Early Middle Ages|Maine]] in Neustria in 789, leaving Pepin the Hunchback his only son without lands.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|p=270}} His relationship with Himiltrude was now apparently seen as illegitimate at his court, and Pepin was sidelined from the succession.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|pp=270, 274β275}} In 792, as his father and brothers were gathered in Regensburg, Pepin conspired with Bavarian nobles to assassinate them and install himself as king. The plot was discovered and revealed to Charlemagne before it could proceed; Pepin was sent to a monastery, and many of his co-conspirators were executed.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|pp=285β287, 438}} The early 790s saw a marked focus on ecclesiastical affairs by Charlemagne. He summoned a council in Regensburg in 792 to address the theological controversy over the [[adoptionism]] doctrine in the Spanish church and formulate a response to the Second Council of Nicea.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|pp=283β284}} The council condemned adoptionism as [[heresy]] and led to the production of the ''[[Libri Carolini]]'', a detailed argument against Nicea's canons.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|pp=289β292}} In 794, Charlemagne called another [[Council of Frankfurt|council in Frankfurt]].{{sfn|Nelson|2019|p=302}} The council confirmed Regensburg's positions on adoptionism and Nicea, recognised the deposition of Tassilo, set grain prices, reformed Frankish coinage, forbade abbesses from blessing men, and endorsed prayer in vernacular languages.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|pp=306β314}} Soon after the council, Fastrada fell ill and died;{{sfn|Nelson|2019|p=304}} Charlemagne married the Alamannian noblewoman [[Luitgard (Frankish queen)|Luitgard]] shortly afterwards.{{sfn|Nelson|2019|pp=340, 377β379}}{{sfn|RichΓ©|1993|p=135}}
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