missi
Missi is a Latin term meaning envoys or messengers, used in medieval and early medieval Europe to denote agents dispatched by a ruler to oversee provincial governance. The most well-known class were the missi dominici, “the envoys of the lord king,” established under the Carolingian dynasty to supervise counts, bishops, and other officials and to ensure royal instruction was followed across the realm.
Charlemagne, and successors such as Louis the Pious, organized systematic circuits in which typically two missi—one
The missi were a central tool of Carolingian governance, intended to project royal authority, promote uniform