It affected the holy Roman Empire by German emperors tried to control the church officials, nobles and popes. In which revolved into conflicts when it was time to select certain church official, and monarchs.
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It affected the holy roman empire by German empire tried to control the church officials, nobles and popes
They led to unstable goverments
He divided the empire into two halves and shared his power with a co-emperor
The excommunication of Emperor Leo III affected the Roman Empire in several ways during the eighth century. The most important impact that it had was that it led to a truce between the iconoclasts and the anti-iconoclasts. As the leader of the iconoclast movement in the eighth century, Emperor Leo III fanned the ill-feelings between the two groups, so his removal from power brought peace.
By trying to get slavery banned throughout the British Empire.
The Holy Roman Emperor and the Holy Roman Empire lasted from the year 800 to 1805 when it was dismantled after the Battle of Austerlitz. Germany was unified in 1871 with the declaration of Wilhelm von Hohenzollern of Prussia as the German Emperor. Thus, the two entities never coincided historically.