Remember when the French actually
fought back against Muslim aggression and invasion?
Remember when we spent that night
at the Holiday Inn in Tours, but we never saw anything historic?
Do the French even have monuments
to Charles Martel?
Interesting
8-minute video explains how the French stopped the raping and pillaging Muslim
advance in Tours, France.
Je Suis
Charles Martel
The
slogan Je Suis Charles Martel is beginning to
make its way around Saint Blogs. Here is some information on the
grandfather of Charlemagne who stopped the advance of Islam into what became
France in 732 at the battle of Tours.
Charles
Martel, “The Hammer”, led a life of conflict. An illegitimate son of
Pepin of Herstal, Mayor of the Palace and the true power behind the Merovingian
puppet kings, after the death of his father he had to fight his father’s
legitimate offspring who sought to deprive him of any share in his father’s
inheritance. Fortunately for Charles a streak of military genius ran
through him, and he won battles against the odds, using force multiplying
stratagems, including feigned retreats, and attacking in the middle of the day
when armies of his time normally took a siesta. By 717 he was in
control of Neustria, showing mercy unusual for his day in letting his
defeated adversaries live and treating them with kindness.
The
28 year old ruler now entered a round of endless wars with neighboring
kingdoms, gradually extending his power, and building up a professional force
of infantry to supplement the peasant levies that made up the vast bulk of most
Frankish armies.
A
friend and patron of Saint Boniface, he also began the alliance between the
rulers of the Franks and the Popes. He contributed much land to the
Church, but roused ecclesiastical ire when he took some back to support his
troops. He might have been excommunicated if both Church and State had
not suddenly confronted a common foe.
In
711 the forces of Islam began the conquest of Spain, helped along by Christian
traitors. Within a decade almost all of Spain had fallen, with small
proto-kingdoms of Spaniards clinging to a precarious independence in the
mountains of northern Spain. Mohammed had died less than a century before
in 632, and in that intervening period Islam had conquered the Middle East,
northern Africa and seemed poised to do the same in Europe against the petty
Christian kingdoms that specialized in ceaseless internecine war,
seemingly weakening themselves before their Islamic foes lifted
a finger.
With
Spain subdued, Muslim raids into what is now France became
common. In 732 Abd-al-Raḥmân, governor of Muslim Spain, led a
predominantly cavalry army of 25,000 men north on a great raid beyond
the Pyrenees, perhaps the prelude to a war of conquest.
Charles
Martel rallied together an infantry army of 15,000, and in early October 732
his army and that of Abd-al-Raḥmân confronted each other for seven days outside
of Tours, Martel making certain to occupy the high ground. Martel
had his army drawn up in a huge phalanx. Tiring of the stalemate, on
October 10, 732 Abd-al-Raḥmân launched cavalry charge after cavalry charge
against the Franks. A Muslim chronicler tells us what happened next:
And
in the shock of the battle the men of the North seemed like a sea that cannot
be moved. Firmly they stood, one close to another, forming as it were a bulwark
of ice; and with great blows of their swords they hewed down the Arabs. Drawn
up in a band around their chief, the people of the Austrasians carried all before them. Their
tireless hands drove their swords down to the breasts [of the foe].
Martel
launched an attack on the enemy camp, causing Abd-al-Raḥmân to order a retreat
to his camp. The retreat became a rout after Abd-al-Raḥmân was
killed in the fighting.
A
Christian chronicle sums up the outcome of Tours:
Prince
Charles boldly drew up his battle lines against them [the Arabs] and the
warrior rushed in against them. With Christ’s help he overturned their tents,
and hastened to battle to grind them small in slaughter. The king Abdirama
having been killed, he destroyed [them], driving forth the army, he fought and
won. Thus did the victor triumph over his enemies.
After
Tours, Charles spent the rest of his life fighting off Islamic invasions from
Spain. Much hard fighting remained ahead, but Tours was the turning
point. The Franks would remain Christians and they ensured that Europe
would remain Christian, thanks to God and the hard fighting Charles Martel and
his Frankish infantry.
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