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    Invasion from Al-Andalus

    arl, surnamedMartellus (hammer), the mayor of the palace for the king of the Frankish domains of Gaul,

    now had his borders secure and could turn his attention south to the growing danger from across the

    Pyrenees: Islamic Iberia, known as Al-Andalus. This term, Al-Andalus, was cultural, not political. Over the

    centuries the Islamic part of southwestern Europe was either one strong state or a variety of very small states known

    as taifa kingdoms. Likewise, Al-Andalus enjoyed independence but also passed through long periods when it was a

    province of various Islamic empires, whose capitals were Damascus, Baghdad, Cairo, and Marrakesh.

    KThe Muslim advance beyond Spain had been slowed by violent bickering among the Andalusian lieutenants

    and generals. Far from the eye of the caliph in Baghdad or Damascus, the emirs, or governors, were left practically

    independent to govern their territories; but they could not rely on their own military leaders. The Muslim lieutenants

    and generals were far more interested in

    deposing and murdering each other than in

    furthering the cause of Islam. In the first 40

    years of Arab rule in Iberia, there were 20

    emirs, seven of whom met violent ends.

    Not until 732 did the Emir 'Abd-ar-

    Rahmn, the viceroy of Al-Andalus, gather

    a force large enough to move again against

    the dukes of Aquitaine. 'Abd-ar-Rahmn

    was the strongest and most popular viceroy

    that Muslim Spain had yet seen, and he

    assembled the largest army that Spain had

    witnessed since Hannibal led his elephants

    toward Italy. Some 80,000 men and their

    horses were mustered on the coasts near

    Barcelona. 'Abd-ar-Rahmn had collected

    reinforcements from North Africa, Egypt,

    and the Abbasid caliph in Baghdad. He had foot soldiers armed with spear and sword, and Arab horsemen wielding

    their deadly scimitars for quick cut-and-slash attacks on the unprotected Frankish flanks. He had siege engines to

    batter the walls of Toulouse and Bordeaux. He had oxcarts loaded with food, wine, and tents for an army camp that

    extended for miles along the Mediterranean shore. The huge army had first to be provisioned and then moved at a

    snails pace over the mountain passes, where they were harassed by pagan Basque mountaineers and Christian

    guerrilla fighters. Then the army had to be reassembled along the coastal lands of Gaul, where the local Moorishgovernor was 'Abd-ar-Rahmn's enemy. Almost six months were occupied with assembling, moving, and readying the

    huge army for a move against the north.

    Eudo (or Eudes), the Duke of Aquitaine, had declared himself independent of the Frankish kingdom. But at

    the news of the force assembling against him, he hurriedly applied to Karl for help and made submission to him. Eudo

    tried to hold the Muslims at the Garonne River, but his personal guards and provincial troops broke and ran,

    whereupon the Andalusians cut them down almost to a man. Eudo escaped to ride north to join with Karl.

    Meanwhile, 'Abd-ar-Rahmn broke through the walls of Bordeaux and allowed his men to loot and terrorize the city.

    2013 Catholic Textbook Project

    The Battle of Tours, by Charles de Steuben (1788-1856)

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    This looting slowed the emir down for another month.

    In the six-month breathing space he had been allowed, Karl had wasted no time. He had called together the

    first united army the Franks had known since the time of Chlodowech (Clovis). He did not rush hastily into battle but

    called in the oaths of every lord and person sworn to him to march with all their men to the Loire River. Relying

    mostly on his own troops from Austrasia, Karl crossed the Loire and advanced to meet his enemy near Tours, the last

    fortress of Aquitaine, to hold the roads north.

    The Battle of Tours

    Karl was aware that this was no common contest. Both Karl and 'Abd-ar-Rahmn told their generals that the fate of

    Aquitaine, possibly all Gaul, would be decided by their battle. Only in hindsight can we see that the fate of the world

    would be decided there. For seven days the two armies faced each other across the open fields, neither side daring to

    advance, both sides taunting the other and trembling with fear at the appearance of their enemy.

    The Muslims had numbers on their sidethree

    times the force of the Franks. Even with all the fighting men

    of both Neustria and Austrasia, and the allies fromBurgundy and the survivors of Aquitaine, Karl had at his

    command no more than 30,000 men. Armed peasants and

    freemen were on foot, and Frankish nobles and their house

    cavalry were mounted but ready to dismount and form a

    shield wall with their foot soldiers when needed. The Franks

    looked on the forest of Andalusian spears and flags across

    the field; but the Andalusians looked on the grim lines of

    Frankish spear men, forming the iron-mailed shield walls

    that had been the Germanic battle formation from the time

    of the migrations. Were the Franks so far from their

    Germanic roots that they no longer remembered the Theory

    of Courage, the necessity of holding the line even in the face

    of expected defeat? The Andalusian emir hoped so.

    Hardly any details of the great struggle are

    recorded. But we know that the Andalusian horsemen

    surged in vain around the impenetrable lines of the Frankish infantry. It is recorded that the shield wall was frozen to

    the earth like a rampart of ice. The Austrasians, Martels countrymen from the Rhine Valley, were at the forefront of

    the battle; with their Mayor Karl, they fought long and fiercely. It was they who slew the Muslim chief, Emir 'Abd-ar-

    Rahmn.

    The fighting went on until night fell and it was no longer possible to tell friend from foe. The Moors withdrew,

    the survivors straggling off toward the south and the passes of the Pyrenees. 'Abd-ar-Rahmn himself lay slain on the

    field; many more thousands of bodies lay piled up in front of the exhausted Frankish line. In the darkness, 'Abd-ar-

    Rahmns lieutenants counted their losses. The total was so appalling that they ordered the whole army to leave their

    camp in the night and retreat for the coast. Their tents, their baggage, their military storesthousands of riderless

    horses, enormous piles of weapons and siege equipmentfell into the hands of the Franks.

    A map of Gaul of the Frankish domains at the death in

    1714 of Pippin of Herstal, KarlMartellus' father. The

    regions are: Austrasia (green), Neustria (red), and

    Aquitaine (yellow)

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    The vast city of tents, stretched over the hills below Poitiers, stood silent in the dawn light. The Franks could

    not believe the Moors had left all that behind. They suspected a trap or ambush, but riders skirting the edges of the

    tent city found no signs of life. Scouts came back to report that survivors of the vast army were on the road heading

    south as fast as they could. Only the dead, piled before the weary ranks of spear men, remained from the host that had

    faced them two nights before. 'Abd-ar-Rahmns body was found under his horse, and Karl gave the emir an

    honorable burial. The other dead were dragged to the river or buried in great mass graves so as not to bring verminand disease to the town. The Franks were victorious.