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When The French Beat Back Moslem Aggression: Charles Martel at Tours
Catholic Encyclopedia ^ | 2000? | Anon

Posted on 03/09/2003 11:32:40 AM PST by Pharmboy

The Battle of Tours

October 10, 732 AD marks the conclusion of the Battle of Tours, arguably one of the most decisive battles in all of history.

A Moslem army, in a crusading search for land and the end of Christianity, after the conquest of Syria, Egypt, and North Africa, began to invade Western Europe under the leadership of Abd-er Rahman, governor of Spain. Abd-er Rahman led an infantry of 60,000 to 400,000 soldiers across the Western Pyrenees and toward the Loire River, but they were met just outside the city of Tours by Charles Martel, known as the Hammer, and the Frankish Army.

Martel gathered his forces directly in the path of the oncoming Moslem army and prepared to defend themselves by using a phalanx style of combat. The invading Moslems rushed forward, relying on the slashing tactics and overwhelming number of horsemen that had brought them victories in the past. However, the French Army, composed of foot soldiers armed only with swords, shields, axes, javelins, and daggers, was well trained. Despite the effectiveness of the Moslem army in previous battles, the terrain caused them a disadvantage. Their strength lied within their cavalry, armed with large swords and lances, which along with their baggage mules, limited their mobility.

The French army displayed great ardency in withstanding the ferocious attack. It was one of the rare times in the Middle Ages when infantry held its ground against a mounted attack. The exact length of the battle is undetermined; Arab sources claim that it was a two day battle whereas Christian sources hold that the fighting clamored on for seven days. In either case, the battle ended when the French captured and killed Abd-er Rahman.

The Moslem army withdrew peacefully overnight and even though Martel expected a surprise retaliation, there was none. For the Moslems, the death of their leader caused a sharp setback and they had no choice but to retreat back across the Pyrenees, never to return again.

Not only did this prove to be an extremely decisive battle for the Christians, but the Battle of Tours is considered the high water mark of the Moslem invasion of Western Europe.

The above, from here: http://campus.northpark.edu/history/WebChron/WestEurope/Tours.html

Charles Martel ("The Hammer")

Born about 688; died at Quierzy on the Oise, 21 October, 741.

He was the natural son of Pepin of Herstal and a woman named Alpaïde or Chalpaïde. Pepin, who died in 714, had outlived his two legitimate sons, Drogon and Grimoald, and to Theodoald, a son of the latter and then only six years old, fell the burdensome inheritance of the French monarchy.

Charles, who was then twenty-six, was not excluded from the succession on account of his birth, Theodoald himself being the son of a concubine, but through the influence of Plectrude, Theodoald's grandmother, who wished the power invested in her own descendants exclusively. To prevent any opposition from Charles she had him cast into prison and, having established herself at Cologne, assumed the guardianship of her grandson. But the different nations whom the strong hand of Pepin of Herstal had held in subjections, shook off the yoke of oppression as soon as they saw that it was with a woman they had to deal.

Neustria gave the signal for revolt (715), Theodoald was beaten in the forest of Cuise and, led by Raginfrid, mayor of the palace, the enemy advanced as far as the Meuse. The Frisians flew to arms and, headed by their duke, Ratbod, destroyed the Christian mission and entered into a confederacy with the Neustrians. The Saxons came and devastated the country of the Hattuarians, and even in Austrasia there was a certain faction that chafed under the government of a woman and child.

At this juncture Charles escaped from prison and put himself at the head of the national party of Austrasia. At first he was unfortunate. He was defeated by Ratbod near Cologne in 716, and the Neustrians forced Plectrude to acknowledge as king Chilperic, the son of Childeric II, having taken this Merovingian from the seclusion of the cloister, where he lived the name of Daniel. But Charles was quick to take revenge. He surprised and conquered the Neustrians at Amblève near Malmédy (716), defeated them a second time at Vincy near Cambrai (21 March, 717), and pursued them as far as Paris. Then retracing his steps, he came to Cologne and compelled Plectrude to surrender her power and turn over to him the wealth of his father, Pepin.

In order to give his recently acquired authority a semblance of legitimacy, he proclaimed the Merovingian Clotaire IV King of Austrasia, reserving for himself the title of Mayor of the Palace.

It was about this time that Charles banished Rigobert, the Bishop of Reims, who had opposed him, appointing in his stead the warlike and unpriestly Milon, who was already Archbishop of Trier.

The ensuing years were full of strife. Eager to chastise the Saxons who had invaded Austrasia, Charles in the year 718 laid waste their country to the banks of the Weser. In 719 Ratbod died, and Charles seized Western Friesland without any great resistance on the part of the Frisians, who had taken possession of it on the death of Pepin. The Neustrians, always a menace, had joined forces with the people of Aquitaine, but Charles hacked their army to pieces at Soissons.

After this defeat they realized the necessity of surrendering, and the death of King Clotaire IV, whom Charles had placed on the throne but two years previously, facilitated reconciliation of the two great fractions of the Frankish Empire. Charles acknowledged Chilperic as head of the entire monarchy, while on their side, the Neustrians and Aquitainians endorsed the authority of Charles; but, when Chilperic died, the following year (720) Charles appointed as his successor the son of Dagobert III, Thierry IV, who was still a minor, and who occupied the throne from 720 to 737.

A second expedition against the Saxons in 720 and the definitive submission of Raginfrid, who had been left the county of Angers (724), re-established the Frankish Monarchy as it had been under Pepin of Herstal, and closed the first series of Charles Martel's struggles. The next six years were devoted almost exclusively to the confirming of the Frankish authority over the dependent Germanic tribes. In 725 and 728 Charles went into Bavaria, where the Agilolfing dukes had gradually rendered themselves independent, and re-established Frankish suzerainty. He also brought thence the Princess Suanehilde, who seems to have become his mistress.

In 730 he marched against Lantfrid, Duke of the Alemanna, whom he likewise brought into subjection, and thus Southern Germany once more became part of the Frankish Empire, as had Northern Germany during the first years of the reign. But at the extremity of the empire a dreadful storm was gathering. For several years the Moslems of Spain had been threatening Gaul. Banished thence in 721 by Duke Eudes, they had returned in 725 and penetrated as far as Burgundy, where they had destroyed Autun.

Duke Eudes, unable to resist them, at length contented himself by negotiating with them, and to Othmar, one of their chiefs, he gave the hand of his daughter But this compromising alliance brought him into disfavour with Charles, who defeated him in 731, and the death of Othmar that same year again left Eudes at the mercy of Moslem enterprise.

In 732 Abd-er-Rahman, Governor of Spain, crossed the Pyrenees at the head of an immense army, overcame Duke Eudes, and advanced as far as the Loire, pillaging and burning as he went. In October, 732, Charles met Abd-er-Rahman outside of Tours and defeated and slew him in a battle (the Battle of Poitiers) which must ever remain one of the great events in the history of the world, as upon its issue depended whether Christian Civilization should continue or Islam prevail throughout Europe.

It was this battle, it is said, that gave Charles his name, Martel (Tudites) "The Hammer", because of the merciless way in which he smote the enemy.

The remainder of Charles Martel's reign was an uninterrupted series of triumphant combats. In 733-734 he suppressed the rebellion instigated by the Frisian duke, Bobo, who was slain in battle, and definitively subdued Friesland, which finally adopted Christianity. In 735, after the death of Eudes, Charles entered Aquitaine, quelled the revolt of Hatto and Hunold, sons of the deceased duke, and left the duchy to Hunold, to be held in fief (736). He then banished the Moslems from Arles and Avignon, defeated their army on the River Berre near Narbonne, and in 739 checked an uprising in Provence, the rebels being under the leadership of Maurontus.

So great was Charles' power during the last years of his reign that he did not take the trouble to appoint a successor to King Thierry IV, who died in 737, but assumed full authority himself, governing without legal right.

About a year before Charles died, Pope Gregory III, threatened by Luitprand, King of Lombardy, asked his help. Now Charles was Luitprand's ally because the latter had promised to assist him in the late war against the Moslems of Provence, and, moreover, the Frankish king may have already suffered from the malady that was to carry him off—two reasons that are surely sufficient to account for the fact that the pope's envoys departed without gaining the object of their errand. However, it would seem that, according to the terms of a public act published by Charlemagne, Charles had, at least in principle, agreed to defend the Roman Church, and death alone must have prevented him from fulfilling this agreement.

The reign, which in the beginning was so full of bloody conflicts and later of such incessant strife, would have been an impossibility had not Charles procured means sufficient to attract and compensate his partisans. For this purpose he conceived the idea of giving them the usufruct of a great many ecclesiastical lands, and this spoliation is what is referred to as the secularization by Charles Martel. It was an expedient that could be excused without, however, being justified, and it was pardoned to a certain extent by the amnesty granted at the Council of Lestines, held under the sons of Charles Martel in 743.

It must also be remembered that the Church remained the legal owner of the lands thus alienated. This spoliation and the conferring of the principal ecclesiastical dignities upon those who were either totally unworthy or else had naught but their military qualifications to recommend them—as, for instance, the assignment of the episcopal Sees of Reims of Reims and Trier to Milon—were not calculated to endear Charles Martel to the clergy of his time. Therefore, in the ninth century Hincmar of Reims related the story of the vision with which St. Eucher was said to have been favoured and which showed Charles in hell, to which he had been condemned for robbing the Church of its property.

But notwithstanding the almost exclusively warlike character of his reign, Charles Martel was not indifferent to the superior interests of civilization and Christianity. Like Napoleon after the French Revolution, upon emerging from the years 715-719, Charles, who had not only tolerated but perpetrated many an act of violence against the Church, set about the establishment of social order and endeavoured to restore the rights of the Catholic hierarchy. This explains the protection which in 723 he accorded St. Boniface (Winfrid), the great apostle of Germany, a protection all the more salutary as the saint himself explained to his old friend, Daniel of Winchester, that without it he could neither administer his church, defend his clergy, nor prevent idolatry. Hence Charles Martel shares, to a certain degree, the glory and merit of Boniface's great work of civilization.

He died after having divided the Frankish Empire, as a patrimony between his two sons, Carloman and Pepin.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 732; arabaggression; battle; caliphate; charlesmartel; christendom; christian; churchhistory; clashofcivilizatio; crusade; defense; france; franks; gaul; history; islam; islamism; martel; moslem; tours; waronterror
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To: Pharmboy
The Ghost of Martel must be weeping since 1940...

Since earlier than that, I think. The tomb of Charles Martel, like that of most of the kings of France, is in the Basilica of Saint Denis outside Paris. Unfortunately, his tomb, like the others, was desecrated by the French Revolutionaries in 1792.

21 posted on 03/09/2003 3:08:35 PM PST by aristeides
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To: Grand Old Partisan
The Moslems conquered Spain with an army smaller than the one Charles Martel defeated in France.

That was because the Visigothic kingdom from which the Moslems took Spain was internally divided and not popular with much of the population of Spain.

22 posted on 03/09/2003 3:11:00 PM PST by aristeides
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To: LibKill
Hmmmm. I may take back one or two of the things I have said about the French. :)

Please let's not kid ourselves! Charles Martel like his son Pepin and his granson Charles the Great were Franks. Calling them French would be like calling Silvio Berlusconi a distant relative of the Ceasars or Cleopatra descendant of the Pharoes.

I don't mean to impugn the honor of the Frankish bloodlines, but a lot happens in a thousand years folks.
23 posted on 03/09/2003 3:18:02 PM PST by Live free or die
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To: Eva
Not much other than that North Africans are swarming all over southern Spain.
24 posted on 03/09/2003 3:21:15 PM PST by Grand Old Partisan
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Comment #25 Removed by Moderator

To: Atlantin
The started things off by killing the Visagoth king in a long-distance cavalry raid.

26 posted on 03/09/2003 3:30:49 PM PST by Grand Old Partisan
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To: Atlantin
The Moslems started things off by killing the Visogoth king in a long-distance cavalry raid.
27 posted on 03/09/2003 3:31:47 PM PST by Grand Old Partisan
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To: Antoninus
Tours isn't that far from Paris, even closer to Versailles, so Martel eally had to put the hammer down, so to speak.
28 posted on 03/09/2003 5:09:26 PM PST by expatpat
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To: ppaul
Half-Polish American Bump!
29 posted on 03/09/2003 5:36:19 PM PST by Clemenza (East side, West side, all around the town. Tripping the light fantastic on the sidewalks of New York)
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Comment #30 Removed by Moderator

To: Live free or die
Of course---you are right; but, the Franks gave their name to the French (and to Frankfort I guess). After the Franks, the Gauls (Celts) and the Allemaigne--who the heck were they, anyway? Goths?
31 posted on 03/09/2003 6:31:24 PM PST by Pharmboy (Dems lie 'cause they have to)
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To: Charles Martel
Yo, Chuck... your ears must certainly be burning, no? ;-)
32 posted on 03/09/2003 6:37:47 PM PST by Cloud William
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To: Pharmboy
The Allemanni were one of the Germanic tribes that moved into Germany after the Goths headded down south to occupy the former Roman Empire.
33 posted on 03/09/2003 7:04:34 PM PST by NovemberCharlie
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To: Pharmboy
The Byzantine Greeks held back Islam for 800 years in Eastern Europe, and continued to preserve the ancient and Christian cultures through the darkness of Turkish and Arab Islamic oppression.
34 posted on 03/09/2003 7:18:55 PM PST by eleni121
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To: aristeides
Thanks for the info re: The Hammer's grave. I did not know that.
35 posted on 03/10/2003 5:46:26 AM PST by Pharmboy (Dems lie 'cause they have to)
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To: Pharmboy
A world-class example of "No Good Deed Goes Unpunished". My namesake arguably did as much to preserve the Catholic Church (and Christianity in general) as had any Pope, yet when he took action against people who had the Church's ear, well, just look at the nonsense they spread:

In order to maintain his power, Charles had to engage in continual struggles with various princes, both secular and ecclesiastical. Following his victory at Poitiers in 732, he attacked some unruly bishops including Eucherius of Orléans. Because of this, his memory suffered. During the ninth century, his tomb at the abbey of St. Denis is said to had been opened by the abbot, and a hideous dragon supposedly emerged from a blackened, charred and otherwise barren coffin; thus demonstrating Charles Martel's damnation for despoiling the Church of its property. Later historians at St. Denis said he had taken Church lands only temporarily and had intended eventually to reimburse and further enrich the Church.

Sounds like the abbot was very fond of the sacramental wine, if you ask me.

36 posted on 03/10/2003 7:49:53 AM PST by Charles Martel
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To: ppaul
It's worth remembering the date of the Battle of Vienna: September 11.
37 posted on 03/10/2003 8:03:07 AM PST by Romulus
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To: Cacique; firebrand; rmlew; Dutchy; StarFan; nutmeg; RaceBannon; Coleus; hot august night; ...
ping.
38 posted on 03/10/2003 8:13:39 AM PST by Black Agnes
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To: Charles Martel
...or magic mushrooms.
39 posted on 03/10/2003 10:38:25 AM PST by Pharmboy (Dems lie 'cause they have to)
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To: All
ping!
40 posted on 03/16/2003 8:00:58 PM PST by Pharmboy (Dems lie 'cause they have to)
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