Henry III was among the most assertive rulers of the Salian dynasty in exercising royal influence over ecclesiastical appointments — the very conflict that would later explode into the Investiture Controversy under his son. Speyer held particular dynastic weight for him; he enlarged and lavishly endowed the Speyer Cathedral, ultimately choosing it as his burial site in 1056. Coinage struck at church mints under his reign reflects the tangled fiscal relationship between crown and clergy that defined Salian governance.
Henry III was among the most assertive rulers of the Salian dynasty in exercising royal influence over ecclesiastical appointments — the very conflict that would later explode into the Investiture Controversy under his son. Speyer held particular dynastic weight for him; he enlarged and lavishly endowed the Speyer Cathedral, ultimately choosing it as his burial site in 1056. Coinage struck at church mints under his reign reflects the tangled fiscal relationship between crown and clergy that defined Salian governance.