Marches
Mark or march (or various plural forms of these words) are derived from the Germanic word marko ("boundary") and refer to an area along a border, e.g. the borderland between England and Scotland; it seems that during Carolingian rule, the word spread throughout Europe.
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After some early setbacks, Charlemagne's son Louis took Barcelona from the Moorish emir in 801, establishing a foothold in the borderland between the Franks and the Moors. The Carolingian "Spanish marches" became a buffer zone,= of small separate territories, each ruled by a count and theoretically owing allegiance to the Emperor, or with less fealty to his Carolingian and Ottonian successors, whose power center was far away. Primitive feudal entities developed, self-sufficient and agrarian, ruled by a small hereditary military elite.
The name of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom in the midlands of England was Mercia. The name "Mercia" comes from the Old English for "boundary folk", and the traditional interpretation was that the kingdom originated along the frontier between the Welsh and the Anglo-Saxon invaders, although P. Hunter Blair has argued an alternative interpretation that they emerged along the frontier between the kingdom of Northumbria and the inhabitants of the Trent river valley.
Later border areas between England and Wales, and between England and Scotland, were denominated marcher.
March was the feudal titles of Earls of March variously held by the powerful border families of Mortimer in the west (in the English peerage) and Dunbar in the northern marches (in the peerage of Scotland).
The district called La Marche, sometimes the Marche Limousine was originally it a small border district partly of Limousin and partly of Poitou. Its area was increased during the 13th century and remained the same until the Revolution. La Marche was bounded on the north by Berry, on the east by Bourbonnais and Auvergne; on the south by Limousin itself and on the west by Poitou. It embraced the greater part of the modern department of Creuse, a considerable part of Haute Vienne, and a fragment of Indre. Its area was about 1900 sq. m.; its capital was Charroux and later Guret, and among its other principal towns were Dorat, Bellac and Confolens.
Marche first appears as a separate fief about the middle of the 10th century when William III, duke of Aquitaine, gave it to one of his vassals named Boso, who took the title of count. In the 12th century it passed to the counts of Limousin, until the death of the childless Count Hugh in 1303, when it was seized by Philip IV of France. In 1316 it was made a duchy for the Prince afterwards Charles IV and a few years later (1327) it passed into the hands of the family of Bourbon. The family of Armagnac held it from 1435 to 1477, when it reverted to the Bourbons, and in 1527 it was seized by Francis I. and became part of the domains of the French crown. It was divided into Haute Marche and Basse Marche, the estates of the former being in existence until the 17th century. From 1470 until the Revolution the province was under the jurisdiction of the parlement of Paris.
information from the Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1911
Marches, DrÃÂôme is also a commune of the DrÃÂôme dÃÂépartement in France.
, e.g. Mark Brandenburg (an area north of Berlin)
Marches were territorial organisations created in the Middle Ages by Holy Roman Empire in the East. In mordern German, the word Mark is used to denote a piece of land that historically was a borderland.
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Italy
From the Carolingian period onwards the name Marca begins to appear, first the Marca Fermana for the mountainous part of Picenum, the Marca Camerinese for the district farther north, including a part of Umbria, and the Marca Anconitana for the former Pentapolis (Ancona). In 1080 the Marca Anconitana was given in investiture to Robert Guiscard by pope Gregory VII, to whom the countess Matilda ceded the Marches of Camerino and of Fermo. In 1105 the Emperor Henry IV invested Werner with the whole territory of the three marches, under the name of the March of Ancona. It was afterwards once more recovered by the Church and governed by papal legates as part of the Papal States. The Marche became part of the kingdom of Italy in 1860.Titles