23 September 2025

The First City

If you saw yesterday's post on city rights, you might wonder: if they weren't already, when was the first "city" thought of as such? Wasn't Rome already a city?

Well yes, cities existed before the Middle Ages. In the growing feudalism north of the Alps, however, a powerful noble claimed control over all the lands he could conquer, or that he was given by a higher-ranking noble. Giving up that power wasn't common. When a municipality proved itself to be especially valuable, however, they might be allowed some self-governance. The first such place north of the Alps was Huy, from Latin Hoius vicus, "Hoyoux village." 

It had an ideal location, at the mouth of the River Hoyoux where it joined the larger River Meuse, making transportation of goods easy. From the original Roman camp, it was evangelized by St. Domitian, the "Apostle of the Meuse Valley," in the 6th century. Legend says he delivered the area from the ravages of a dragon.

Huy also became known for tanning, woodworking, and wine, making it one of the most prosperous cities along the river. When the local office of bishop became a prince of the Holy Roman Empire in 985, Huy and the area around it became its own county, with a count appointed by the bishop to administer it.

By this time it already had a market; we know this because records of King Childeric III in 743 gave an exemption to some monks from the toll paid on goods sold at the market. (That was kind of Childeric, since these tolls—essentially a sales tax—provided a healthy source of revenue for royal coffers.) Revenues from Huy were sufficient that King Lothair II in 862 diverted some to the double monastery of Stavelot-Malmedy. In 890 its status was upgraded with the construction of a fortress on a hill. (The illustration shows the castle as it appeared c.1600.)

We don't know what the tipping point was. It was overseen by a series of counts, but under Count Conon in 1066 it was granted the first known city rights charter north of the Alps.

Huy was one of the areas Peter the Hermit wandered through to drum up support for the First Crusade and the People's Crusade. The textile industry was an enormous source of its power and revenue in the 13th and 14th centuries.

One of its strengths—its strategic position on the rivers—made it a target during the wars of Louis XIV, and it suffered so much that the residents dismantled the castle themselves in 1715 to eliminate its military value. A modern citadel exists on the hill now.

When power transfers hands, someone suffers. What was Count Conon like, and was it difficult for him to have such a gem removed from his governance? Let's take a look at this obscure Count of Montaigu tomorrow.

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