The respect Einhard has for Charlemagne is of the highest regard. Einhard describes Charlemagne’s spirit as mettlesome and imperturbable, and …show more content…
Charlemagne brought in scholars from all across his empire and even beyond it. This is what historians refer to as the Carolingian renaissance, and was fueled by Charlemagne’s perception of having received a divinely ordained mission. As a result of the sheer extant of resources that Charlemagne used to back this mission, there was a significant increase in the circulation and standardization of basic Christian literature. Additionally, advances in bookbinding and handwriting; the letters we print today were derived from the Carolingian miniscule. And, all of this was despite the fact that Charlemagne himself couldn’t read or write. Hence, not only was Charlemagne powerful and influential, but he also used that power and influence to mobilize a literary and intellectual revolution during his reign. Einhard was himself a product of this renaissance and the biography of Charlemagne’s life, which he wrote as a tribute, should provide sufficient evidence that Einhard considers this to be one of the factors that made Charlemagne the greatest king of the middle