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Charles Martel

Charles Martel (c. 688 – 22 October 741)[3] was a Frankish political and military leader who, as Duke and Prince of the Franks and Mayor of the Palace, was the de facto ruler of Francia from 718 until his death.[4][5][6] He was a son of the Frankish statesman Pepin of Herstal and Pepin's mistress, a noblewoman named Alpaida. Charles, also known as "The Hammer" (in Old French, Martel), successfully asserted his claims to power as successor to his father as the power behind the throne in Frankish politics. Continuing and building on his father's work, he restored centralized government in Francia and began the series of military campaigns that re-established the Franks as the undisputed masters of all Gaul. According to a near-contemporary source, the Liber Historiae Francorum, Charles was "a warrior who was uncommonly ... effective in battle".[7]

Charles Martel
19th-century sculpture at the Palace of Versailles[1][full citation needed]
Duke and Prince of the Franks
Reign718–741
Coronation718
PredecessorPepin of Herstal
SuccessorPepin the Short
Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia
Reign715–741
Coronation715
PredecessorTheudoald
SuccessorCarloman
Mayor of the Palace of Neustria
Reign718–741
Coronation718
PredecessorRagenfrid
SuccessorPepin the Short
Ruler of the Franks
Reign737–741
Coronation737
PredecessorTheuderic IV
SuccessorChilderic III
Born23 August 676 or 686, 688[2] or 690
Herstal, Belgium, then known as Austrasia
Died22 October 741 (aged 50–53, 55 or 65)
Quierzy, Frankish Empire
Burial
Spouse
Issue
HousePippinid
Carolingian (founder)
FatherPepin of Herstal
MotherAlpaida
ReligionRoman Catholicism

Martel gained a very consequential victory against an Umayyad invasion of Aquitaine at the Battle of Tours, at a time when the Umayyad Caliphate controlled most of the Iberian Peninsula. Alongside his military endeavours, Charles has been traditionally credited with a seminal role in the development of the Frankish system of feudalism.[8][9]

At the end of his reign, Charles divided Francia between his sons, Carloman and Pepin. The latter became the first king of the Carolingian dynasty. Pepin's son Charlemagne, grandson of Charles, extended the Frankish realms and became the first emperor in the West since the fall of Rome.[10]

Background

Charles, nicknamed "Martel", or "Charles the Hammer" in later chronicles, was the illegitimate son of Pepin of Herstal and his mistress, possible second wife, Alpaida.[11][12] He had a brother named Childebrand, who later became the Frankish dux (that is, duke) of Burgundy.[13]

In older historiography, it was common to describe Charles as "illegitimate". But the dividing line between wives and concubines was not clear-cut in eighth-century Francia, and it is likely that the accusation of "illegitimacy" derives from the desire of Pepin's first wife Plectrude to see her progeny as heirs to Pepin's power.[14][15]

After the reign of Dagobert I (629–639) the Merovingians effectively ceded power to the Pippinid Mayors of the Palace, who ruled the Frankish realm of Austrasia in all but name. They controlled the royal treasury, dispensed patronage, and granted land and privileges in the name of the figurehead king. Charles' father, Pepin of Herstal, was able to unite the Frankish realm by conquering Neustria and Burgundy. Pepin was the first to call himself Duke and Prince of the Franks, a title later taken up by Charles.

Contesting for power

 
The Frankish kingdoms at the time of the death of Pepin of Heristal (714). Aquitaine (yellow) was outside Arnulfing authority and Neustria and Burgundy (pink) were united in opposition to further Arnulfing dominance of the highest offices. Only Austrasia (green) supported an Arnulfing mayor, first Theudoald then Charles. The German duchies to the east of the Rhine were de facto outside of Frankish suzerainty at this time.

In December 714, Pepin of Herstal died.[16] A few months before his death and shortly after the murder of his son Grimoald the Younger, he had, at his wife Plectrude's urging, designated Theudoald, his grandson by their late son Grimoald, his heir in the entire realm. This was immediately opposed by the Austrasian nobles because Theudoald was a child of only eight years of age. To prevent Charles using this unrest to his own advantage, Plectrude had him imprisoned in Cologne, the city which was intended to be her capital. This prevented an uprising on his behalf in Austrasia, but not in Neustria.

Civil war of 715–718

Pepin's death occasioned open conflict between his heirs and the Neustrian nobles who sought political independence from Austrasian control. In 715, Dagobert III named Ragenfrid mayor of their palace, effectively declaring political independence. On 26 September 715, Ragenfrid's Neustrians met the young Theudoald's forces at the Battle of Compiègne. Theudoald was defeated and fled back to Cologne. Before the end of the year, Charles Martel had escaped from prison and been acclaimed mayor by the nobles of Austrasia.[16] That same year, Dagobert III died and the Neustrians proclaimed Chilperic II, the cloistered son of Childeric II, as king.

Battle of Cologne

In 716, Chilperic and Ragenfrid together led an army into Austrasia intent on seizing the Pippinid wealth at Cologne. The Neustrians allied with another invading force under Redbad, King of the Frisians and met Charles in battle near Cologne, which was still held by Plectrude. Charles had little time to gather men, or prepare, and the result was inevitable. The Frisians held off Charles, while the king and his mayor besieged Plectrude at Cologne, where she bought them off with a substantial portion of Pepin's treasure. After that they withdrew.[17] The Battle of Cologne is the only defeat of Charles Martel's career.

Battle of Amblève

Charles retreated to the hills of the Eifel to gather men, and train them. Having made the proper preparations, in April 716, he fell upon the triumphant army near Malmedy as it was returning to its own province. In the ensuing Battle of Amblève, Martel attacked as the enemy rested at midday. According to one source, he split his forces into several groups which fell at them from many sides.[18] Another suggests that while this was his intention, he then decided, given the enemy's unpreparedness, this was not necessary. In any event, the suddenness of the assault led them to believe they were facing a much larger host. Many of the enemy fled and Martel's troops gathered the spoils of the camp. Martel's reputation increased considerably as a result, and he attracted more followers. This battle is often considered by historians as the turning point in Charles's struggle.[19]

Battle of Vincy

Richard Gerberding points out that up to this time, much of Martel's support was probably from his mother's kindred in the lands around Liege. After Amblève, he seems to have won the backing of the influential Willibrord, founder of the Abbey of Echternach. The abbey had been built on land donated by Plectrude's mother, Irmina of Oeren, but most of Willibrord's missionary work had been carried out in Frisia. In joining Chilperic and Ragenfrid, Radbod of Frisia sacked Utrecht, burning churches and killing many missionaries. Willibrord and his monks were forced to flee to Echternach. Gerberding suggests that Willibrord had decided that the chances of preserving his life's work were better with a successful field commander like Martel than with Plectrude in Cologne. Willibrord subsequently baptized Martel's son Pepin. Gerberding suggests a likely date of Easter 716.[20] Martel also received support from bishop Pepo of Verdun.

Charles took time to rally more men and prepare. By the following spring, Charles had attracted enough support to invade Neustria. Charles sent an envoy who proposed a cessation of hostilities if Chilperic would recognize his rights as mayor of the palace in Austrasia. The refusal was not unexpected but served to impress upon Martel's forces the unreasonableness of the Neustrians. They met near Cambrai at the Battle of Vincy on 21 March 717. The victorious Martel pursued the fleeing king and mayor to Paris, but as he was not yet prepared to hold the city, he turned back to deal with Plectrude and Cologne. He took the city and dispersed her adherents. Plectrude was allowed to retire to a convent. Theudoald lived to 741 under his uncle's protection, a kindness unusual for those times, when mercy to a former gaoler, or a potential rival, was rare.[citation needed]

Consolidation of power

Upon this success, Charles proclaimed Chlothar IV king of Austrasia in opposition to Chilperic and deposed Rigobert, archbishop of Reims, replacing him with Milo, a lifelong supporter.

In 718, Chilperic responded to Charles' new ascendancy by making an alliance with Odo the Great (or Eudes, as he is sometimes known), the duke of Aquitaine, who had become independent during the civil war in 715, but was again defeated, at the Battle of Soissons, by Charles.[21] Chilperic fled with his ducal ally to the land south of the Loire and Ragenfrid fled to Angers. Soon Chlotar IV died and Odo surrendered King Chilperic in exchange for Charles recognizing his dukedom. Charles recognized Chilperic as king of the Franks in return for legitimate royal affirmation of his own mayoralty over all the kingdoms.

Wars of 718–732

 
The Saracen Army outside Paris, 730–32, in an early-nineteenth-century depiction by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld.

Between 718 and 732, Charles secured his power through a series of victories. Having unified the Franks under his banner, Charles was determined to punish the Saxons who had invaded Austrasia. Therefore, late in 718, he laid waste their country to the banks of the Weser, the Lippe, and the Ruhr.[16] He defeated them in the Teutoburg Forest and thus secured the Frankish border in the name of King Chlotaire.

When the Frisian leader Radbod died in 719, Charles seized West Frisia without any great resistance on the part of the Frisians, who had been subjected to the Franks but had rebelled upon the death of Pippin. When Chilperic II died in 721, Charles appointed as his successor the son of Dagobert III, Theuderic IV, who was still a minor, and who occupied the throne from 721 to 737. Charles was now appointing the kings whom he supposedly served (rois fainéants) although they were mere figureheads. By the end of his reign, he didn't appoint any at all. At this time, Charles again marched against the Saxons. Then the Neustrians rebelled under Ragenfrid, who had left the county of Anjou. They were easily defeated in 724 but Ragenfrid gave up his sons as hostages in turn for keeping his county. This ended the civil wars of Charles' reign.

The next six years were devoted in their entirety to assuring Frankish authority over the neighboring political groups. Between 720 and 723, Charles was fighting in Bavaria, where the Agilolfing dukes had gradually evolved into independent rulers, recently in alliance with Liutprand the Lombard. He forced the Alemanni to accompany him, and Duke Hugbert submitted to Frankish suzerainty. In 725 he brought back the Agilolfing Princess Swanachild as a second wife.

In 725 and 728, he again entered Bavaria but, in 730, he marched against Lantfrid, Duke of Alemannia, who had also become independent, and killed him in battle. He forced the Alemanni to capitulate to Frankish suzerainty and did not appoint a successor to Lantfrid. Thus, southern Germany once more became part of the Frankish kingdom, as had northern Germany during the first years of the reign.

Aquitaine and the Battle of Tours in 732

In 731, after defeating the Saxons, Charles turned his attention to the rival southern realm of Aquitaine, and crossed the Loire, breaking the treaty with Duke Odo. The Franks ransacked Aquitaine twice, and captured Bourges, although Odo retook it. The Continuations of Fredegar allege that Odo called on assistance from the recently established emirate of al-Andalus, but there had been Arab raids into Aquitaine from the 720s onwards. Indeed, the anonymous Chronicle of 754 records a victory for Odo in 721 at the Battle of Toulouse, while the Liber Pontificalis records that Odo had killed 375,000 Saracens.[22] It is more likely that this invasion or raid took place in revenge for Odo's support for a rebel Berber leader named Munnuza.

Whatever the precise circumstances were, it is clear that an army under the leadership of Abd al-Rahman al-Ghafiqi headed north, and after some minor engagements marched on the wealthy city of Tours. According to British medieval historian Paul Fouracre, "Their campaign should perhaps be interpreted as a long-distance raid rather than the beginning of a war".[23] They were, however, defeated by the army of Charles at the Battle of Tours (known in France as the Battle of Poitiers), at a location between the French cities of Tours and Poitiers, in a victory described by the Continuations of Fredegar. According to the historian Bernard Bachrach, the Arab army, mostly mounted, failed to break through the Frankish infantry.[24] News of this battle spread, and may be recorded in Bede's Ecclesiastical History (Book V, ch. 23). However, it is not given prominence in Arabic sources from the period.[25]

Despite his victory, Charles did not gain full control of Aquitaine, and Odo remained duke until 735.

Wars of 732–737

 
Charles Martel's military campaigns in Aquitaine, Septimania and Provence after the Battle of Tour-Poitiers (734–742)

Between his victory of 732 and 735, Charles reorganized the kingdom of Burgundy, replacing the counts and dukes with his loyal supporters, thus strengthening his hold on power. He was forced, by the ventures of Bubo, Duke of the Frisians, to invade independent-minded Frisia again in 734. In that year, he slew the duke at the Battle of the Boarn. Charles ordered the Frisian pagan shrines destroyed, and so wholly subjugated the populace that the region was peaceful for twenty years after.

In 735, Duke Odo of Aquitaine died. Though Charles wished to rule the duchy directly and went there to elicit the submission of the Aquitanians, the aristocracy proclaimed Odo's son, Hunald I of Aquitaine, as duke, and Charles and Hunald eventually recognised each other's position.

Interregnum (737–741)

In 737, at the tail end of his campaigning in Provence and Septimania, the Merovingian king, Theuderic IV, died. Charles, titling himself maior domus and princeps et dux Francorum, did not appoint a new king and nobody acclaimed one. The throne lay vacant until Charles' death. The interregnum, the final four years of Charles' life, was relatively peaceful although in 738 he compelled the Saxons of Westphalia to submit and pay tribute and in 739 he checked an uprising in Provence where some rebels united under the leadership of Maurontus.

Charles used the relative peace to set about integrating the outlying realms of his empire into the Frankish church. He erected four dioceses in Bavaria (Salzburg, Regensburg, Freising, and Passau) and gave them Boniface as archbishop and metropolitan over all Germany east of the Rhine, with his seat at Mainz. Boniface had been under his protection from 723 on. Indeed, 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.

In 739, Pope Gregory III begged Charles for his aid against Liutprand, but Charles was loath to fight his onetime ally and ignored the plea. Nonetheless, the pope's request for Frankish protection showed how far Charles had come from the days when he was tottering on excommunication, and set the stage for his son and grandson to assert themselves in the peninsula.

Death and transition in rule

 
14th-century depiction of the death of Charles Martel

Charles Martel died on 22 October 741, at Quierzy-sur-Oise in what is today the Aisne département in the Picardy region of France. He was buried at Saint Denis Basilica in Paris.[26]

His territories had been divided among his adult sons a year earlier: to Carloman he gave Austrasia, Alemannia, and Thuringia, and to Pippin the Younger Neustria, Burgundy, Provence, and Metz and Trier in the "Mosel duchy". Grifo was given several lands throughout the kingdom, but at a later date, just before Charles died.[27]: 50 

Legacy

Earlier in his life Charles Martel had many internal opponents and felt the need to appoint his own kingly claimant, Chlotar IV. Later, however, the dynamics of rulership in Francia had changed, and no hallowed Merovingian ruler was required. Charles divided his realm among his sons without opposition (though he ignored his young son Bernard). For many historians, Charles Martel laid the foundations for his son Pepin's rise to the Frankish throne in 751, and his grandson Charlemagne's imperial acclamation in 800. However, for Paul Fouracre, while Charles was "the most effective military leader in Francia", his career "finished on a note of unfinished business".[28]

 
Charles Martel divides the realm between Pepin and Carloman (Grandes Chroniques de France - Bibliothèque Nationale)

Family and children

Charles Martel married twice, his first wife being Rotrude of Treves, daughter either of Lambert II, Count of Hesbaye, or of Leudwinus, Count of Treves. They had the following children:

Most of the children married and had issue. Hiltrud married Odilo I (Duke of Bavaria). Landrade was once believed to have married a Sigrand (Count of Hesbania) but Sigrand's wife was more likely the sister of Rotrude. Auda married Thierry IV (Count of Autun and Toulouse).

Charles also married a second time, to Swanhild and they had a child named Grifo.[27]: 50 

Charles Martel also had a known mistress, Ruodhaid, with whom he had:

Reputation and historiography

 
Charles Martel depicted in the French book "Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum" by Guillaume Rouillé, published in 1553

Military victories

For early medieval authors, Charles Martel was famous for his military victories. Paul the Deacon for instance attributed a victory against the Saracens actually won by Odo of Aquitaine to Charles.[30] However, alongside this there soon developed a darker reputation, for his alleged abuse of church property. A ninth-century text, the Visio Eucherii, possibly written by Hincmar of Reims, portrayed Martel as suffering in hell for this reason.[31] According to British medieval historian Paul Fouracre, this was "the single most important text in the construction of Charles Martel's reputation as a seculariser or despoiler of church lands".[32]

By the eighteenth century, historians such as Edward Gibbon had begun to portray the Frankish leader as the saviour of Christian Europe from a full-scale Islamic invasion. In Gibbon's The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire he wonders whether without Charles' victory, "Perhaps the interpretation of the Koran would now be taught in the schools of Oxford".[33]

In the nineteenth century, the German historian Heinrich Brunner argued that Charles had confiscated church lands in order to fund military reforms that allowed him to defeat the Arab conquests, in this way brilliantly combining two traditions about the ruler. However, Fouracre argued that "...there is not enough evidence to show that there was a decisive change either in the way in which the Franks fought, or in the way in which they organised the resources needed to support their warriors."[34]

Many twentieth-century European historians continued to develop Gibbon's perspectives, such as French medievalist Christian Pfister, who wrote in 1911 that

"Besides establishing a certain unity in Gaul, Charles saved it from a great peril. In 711 the Arabs had conquered Spain. In 720 they crossed the Pyrenees, seized Narbonensis, a dependency of the kingdom of the Visigoths, and advanced on Gaul. By his able policy Odo succeeded in arresting their progress for some years; but a new vali, Abdur Rahman, a member of an extremely fanatical sect, resumed the attack, reached Poitiers, and advanced on Tours, the holy town of Gaul. In October 732—just 100 years after the death of Mahomet—Charles gained a brilliant victory over Abdur Rahman, who was called back to Africa by revolts of the Berbers and had to give up the struggle. ...After his victory, Charles took the offensive".[3]

Similarly, William E. Watson, who wrote of the battle's importance in Frankish and world history in 1993, suggested that

"Had Charles Martel suffered at Tours-Poitiers the fate of King Roderick at the Rio Barbate, it is doubtful that a "do-nothing" sovereign of the Merovingian realm could have later succeeded where his talented major domus had failed. Indeed, as Charles was the progenitor of the Carolingian line of Frankish rulers and grandfather of Charlemagne, one can even say with a degree of certainty that the subsequent history of the West would have proceeded along vastly different currents had 'Abd al-Rahman been victorious at Tours-Poitiers in 732."[35]

And in 1993, the influential political scientist Samuel Huntington saw the battle of Tours as marking the end of the "Arab and Moorish surge west and north".[36]

Other recent historians, however, argue that the importance of the battle is dramatically overstated, both for European history in general and for Charles Martel's reign in particular. This view is typified by Alessandro Barbero, who in 2004 wrote,

"Today, historians tend to play down the significance of the battle of Poitiers, pointing out that the purpose of the Arab force defeated by Charles Martel was not to conquer the Frankish kingdom, but simply to pillage the wealthy monastery of St-Martin of Tours".[37]

Similarly, in 2002 Tomaž Mastnak wrote:

"The continuators of Fredegar's chronicle, who probably wrote in the mid-eighth century, pictured the battle as just one of many military encounters between Christians and Saracens—moreover, as only one in a series of wars fought by Frankish princes for booty and territory... One of Fredegar's continuators presented the battle of Poitiers as what it really was: an episode in the struggle between Christian princes as the Carolingians strove to bring Aquitaine under their rule."[38]

More recently, the memory of Charles Martel has been appropriated by far right and white nationalist groups, such as the 'Charles Martel Group' in France, and by Australian Brenton Harrison Tarrant, the perpetrator of the Christchurch mosque shootings at Al Noor Mosque and Linwood Islamic Centre in Christchurch, New Zealand, in 2019.[39] The memory of Charles Martel is a topic of debate in contemporary French politics on both the right and the left.[40]

Order of the Genet

In the seventeenth century, a legend emerged that Charles Martel had formed the first regular order of knights in France. In 1620, Andre Favyn stated (without providing a source) that among the spoils Charles Martel's forces captured after the Battle of Tours were many genets (raised for their fur) and several of their pelts.[41] Charles Martel gave these furs to leaders amongst his army, forming the first order of knighthood, the Order of the Genet. Favyn's claim was then repeated and elaborated in later works in English, for instance by Elias Ashmole in 1672,[42] and James Coats in 1725.[43]

References

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External links

  • : A sketch giving the context of the conflict from the Arab point of view.
  • Poke's edition of Creasy's "15 Most Important Battles Ever Fought According to Edward Shepherd Creasy" Chapter VII. The Battle of Tours, A.D. 732.
  • Richard Hooker,
  • 'The Battle of Tours', BBC Radio 4 In Our Time (2014)
  • Robert W. Martin, , from About.com
  • Medieval Sourcebook: Arabs, Franks, and the Battle of Tours, 732
  • Arabs, Franks, and the Battle of Tours, 732: Three Accounts from the Internet Medieval Sourcebook
  • Medieval Sourcebook: Gregory II to Charles Martel, 739
  • Medieval Lands Project: Franks, Merovingian Nobility
  • Pfister, Christian (1911). "Charles Martel" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). pp. 942–943.
Charles Martel
Carolingian Dynasty
Born: 676, 686, 688 or 690 Died: 741
Regnal titles
Preceded by Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia
717–741
Succeeded by
Preceded by Mayor of the Palace of Neustria
717–741
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of the Franks
(Acting)

737–741
Succeeded by

charles, martel, this, article, about, frankish, ruler, other, uses, disambiguation, october, frankish, political, military, leader, duke, prince, franks, mayor, palace, facto, ruler, francia, from, until, death, frankish, statesman, pepin, herstal, pepin, mis. This article is about the Frankish ruler For other uses see Charles Martel disambiguation Charles Martel c 688 22 October 741 3 was a Frankish political and military leader who as Duke and Prince of the Franks and Mayor of the Palace was the de facto ruler of Francia from 718 until his death 4 5 6 He was a son of the Frankish statesman Pepin of Herstal and Pepin s mistress a noblewoman named Alpaida Charles also known as The Hammer in Old French Martel successfully asserted his claims to power as successor to his father as the power behind the throne in Frankish politics Continuing and building on his father s work he restored centralized government in Francia and began the series of military campaigns that re established the Franks as the undisputed masters of all Gaul According to a near contemporary source the Liber Historiae Francorum Charles was a warrior who was uncommonly effective in battle 7 Charles MartelDuke and Prince of the Franks Mayor of the Palace19th century sculpture at the Palace of Versailles 1 full citation needed Duke and Prince of the FranksReign718 741Coronation718PredecessorPepin of HerstalSuccessorPepin the ShortMayor of the Palace of AustrasiaReign715 741Coronation715PredecessorTheudoaldSuccessorCarlomanMayor of the Palace of NeustriaReign718 741Coronation718PredecessorRagenfridSuccessorPepin the ShortRuler of the FranksReign737 741Coronation737PredecessorTheuderic IVSuccessorChilderic IIIBorn23 August 676 or 686 688 2 or 690Herstal Belgium then known as AustrasiaDied22 October 741 aged 50 53 55 or 65 Quierzy Frankish EmpireBurialBasilica of St DenisSpouseRotrude of Trier SwanachildIssueCarloman Pepin the Short Grifo Bernard Hieronymus Remigius of Rouen Hiltrud AudaHousePippinidCarolingian founder FatherPepin of HerstalMotherAlpaidaReligionRoman Catholicism Martel gained a very consequential victory against an Umayyad invasion of Aquitaine at the Battle of Tours at a time when the Umayyad Caliphate controlled most of the Iberian Peninsula Alongside his military endeavours Charles has been traditionally credited with a seminal role in the development of the Frankish system of feudalism 8 9 At the end of his reign Charles divided Francia between his sons Carloman and Pepin The latter became the first king of the Carolingian dynasty Pepin s son Charlemagne grandson of Charles extended the Frankish realms and became the first emperor in the West since the fall of Rome 10 Contents 1 Background 2 Contesting for power 2 1 Civil war of 715 718 2 1 1 Battle of Cologne 2 1 2 Battle of Ambleve 2 1 3 Battle of Vincy 3 Consolidation of power 3 1 Wars of 718 732 4 Aquitaine and the Battle of Tours in 732 5 Wars of 732 737 6 Interregnum 737 741 7 Death and transition in rule 8 Legacy 8 1 Family and children 9 Reputation and historiography 9 1 Military victories 9 2 Order of the Genet 10 References 11 External linksBackground EditCharles nicknamed Martel or Charles the Hammer in later chronicles was the illegitimate son of Pepin of Herstal and his mistress possible second wife Alpaida 11 12 He had a brother named Childebrand who later became the Frankish dux that is duke of Burgundy 13 In older historiography it was common to describe Charles as illegitimate But the dividing line between wives and concubines was not clear cut in eighth century Francia and it is likely that the accusation of illegitimacy derives from the desire of Pepin s first wife Plectrude to see her progeny as heirs to Pepin s power 14 15 After the reign of Dagobert I 629 639 the Merovingians effectively ceded power to the Pippinid Mayors of the Palace who ruled the Frankish realm of Austrasia in all but name They controlled the royal treasury dispensed patronage and granted land and privileges in the name of the figurehead king Charles father Pepin of Herstal was able to unite the Frankish realm by conquering Neustria and Burgundy Pepin was the first to call himself Duke and Prince of the Franks a title later taken up by Charles Contesting for power Edit The Frankish kingdoms at the time of the death of Pepin of Heristal 714 Aquitaine yellow was outside Arnulfing authority and Neustria and Burgundy pink were united in opposition to further Arnulfing dominance of the highest offices Only Austrasia green supported an Arnulfing mayor first Theudoald then Charles The German duchies to the east of the Rhine were de facto outside of Frankish suzerainty at this time In December 714 Pepin of Herstal died 16 A few months before his death and shortly after the murder of his son Grimoald the Younger he had at his wife Plectrude s urging designated Theudoald his grandson by their late son Grimoald his heir in the entire realm This was immediately opposed by the Austrasian nobles because Theudoald was a child of only eight years of age To prevent Charles using this unrest to his own advantage Plectrude had him imprisoned in Cologne the city which was intended to be her capital This prevented an uprising on his behalf in Austrasia but not in Neustria Civil war of 715 718 Edit Pepin s death occasioned open conflict between his heirs and the Neustrian nobles who sought political independence from Austrasian control In 715 Dagobert III named Ragenfrid mayor of their palace effectively declaring political independence On 26 September 715 Ragenfrid s Neustrians met the young Theudoald s forces at the Battle of Compiegne Theudoald was defeated and fled back to Cologne Before the end of the year Charles Martel had escaped from prison and been acclaimed mayor by the nobles of Austrasia 16 That same year Dagobert III died and the Neustrians proclaimed Chilperic II the cloistered son of Childeric II as king Battle of Cologne Edit In 716 Chilperic and Ragenfrid together led an army into Austrasia intent on seizing the Pippinid wealth at Cologne The Neustrians allied with another invading force under Redbad King of the Frisians and met Charles in battle near Cologne which was still held by Plectrude Charles had little time to gather men or prepare and the result was inevitable The Frisians held off Charles while the king and his mayor besieged Plectrude at Cologne where she bought them off with a substantial portion of Pepin s treasure After that they withdrew 17 The Battle of Cologne is the only defeat of Charles Martel s career Battle of Ambleve Edit Charles retreated to the hills of the Eifel to gather men and train them Having made the proper preparations in April 716 he fell upon the triumphant army near Malmedy as it was returning to its own province In the ensuing Battle of Ambleve Martel attacked as the enemy rested at midday According to one source he split his forces into several groups which fell at them from many sides 18 Another suggests that while this was his intention he then decided given the enemy s unpreparedness this was not necessary In any event the suddenness of the assault led them to believe they were facing a much larger host Many of the enemy fled and Martel s troops gathered the spoils of the camp Martel s reputation increased considerably as a result and he attracted more followers This battle is often considered by historians as the turning point in Charles s struggle 19 Battle of Vincy Edit Richard Gerberding points out that up to this time much of Martel s support was probably from his mother s kindred in the lands around Liege After Ambleve he seems to have won the backing of the influential Willibrord founder of the Abbey of Echternach The abbey had been built on land donated by Plectrude s mother Irmina of Oeren but most of Willibrord s missionary work had been carried out in Frisia In joining Chilperic and Ragenfrid Radbod of Frisia sacked Utrecht burning churches and killing many missionaries Willibrord and his monks were forced to flee to Echternach Gerberding suggests that Willibrord had decided that the chances of preserving his life s work were better with a successful field commander like Martel than with Plectrude in Cologne Willibrord subsequently baptized Martel s son Pepin Gerberding suggests a likely date of Easter 716 20 Martel also received support from bishop Pepo of Verdun Charles took time to rally more men and prepare By the following spring Charles had attracted enough support to invade Neustria Charles sent an envoy who proposed a cessation of hostilities if Chilperic would recognize his rights as mayor of the palace in Austrasia The refusal was not unexpected but served to impress upon Martel s forces the unreasonableness of the Neustrians They met near Cambrai at the Battle of Vincy on 21 March 717 The victorious Martel pursued the fleeing king and mayor to Paris but as he was not yet prepared to hold the city he turned back to deal with Plectrude and Cologne He took the city and dispersed her adherents Plectrude was allowed to retire to a convent Theudoald lived to 741 under his uncle s protection a kindness unusual for those times when mercy to a former gaoler or a potential rival was rare citation needed Consolidation of power EditUpon this success Charles proclaimed Chlothar IV king of Austrasia in opposition to Chilperic and deposed Rigobert archbishop of Reims replacing him with Milo a lifelong supporter In 718 Chilperic responded to Charles new ascendancy by making an alliance with Odo the Great or Eudes as he is sometimes known the duke of Aquitaine who had become independent during the civil war in 715 but was again defeated at the Battle of Soissons by Charles 21 Chilperic fled with his ducal ally to the land south of the Loire and Ragenfrid fled to Angers Soon Chlotar IV died and Odo surrendered King Chilperic in exchange for Charles recognizing his dukedom Charles recognized Chilperic as king of the Franks in return for legitimate royal affirmation of his own mayoralty over all the kingdoms Wars of 718 732 Edit The Saracen Army outside Paris 730 32 in an early nineteenth century depiction by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld Between 718 and 732 Charles secured his power through a series of victories Having unified the Franks under his banner Charles was determined to punish the Saxons who had invaded Austrasia Therefore late in 718 he laid waste their country to the banks of the Weser the Lippe and the Ruhr 16 He defeated them in the Teutoburg Forest and thus secured the Frankish border in the name of King Chlotaire When the Frisian leader Radbod died in 719 Charles seized West Frisia without any great resistance on the part of the Frisians who had been subjected to the Franks but had rebelled upon the death of Pippin When Chilperic II died in 721 Charles appointed as his successor the son of Dagobert III Theuderic IV who was still a minor and who occupied the throne from 721 to 737 Charles was now appointing the kings whom he supposedly served rois faineants although they were mere figureheads By the end of his reign he didn t appoint any at all At this time Charles again marched against the Saxons Then the Neustrians rebelled under Ragenfrid who had left the county of Anjou They were easily defeated in 724 but Ragenfrid gave up his sons as hostages in turn for keeping his county This ended the civil wars of Charles reign The next six years were devoted in their entirety to assuring Frankish authority over the neighboring political groups Between 720 and 723 Charles was fighting in Bavaria where the Agilolfing dukes had gradually evolved into independent rulers recently in alliance with Liutprand the Lombard He forced the Alemanni to accompany him and Duke Hugbert submitted to Frankish suzerainty In 725 he brought back the Agilolfing Princess Swanachild as a second wife In 725 and 728 he again entered Bavaria but in 730 he marched against Lantfrid Duke of Alemannia who had also become independent and killed him in battle He forced the Alemanni to capitulate to Frankish suzerainty and did not appoint a successor to Lantfrid Thus southern Germany once more became part of the Frankish kingdom as had northern Germany during the first years of the reign Aquitaine and the Battle of Tours in 732 EditMain article Battle of Tours In 731 after defeating the Saxons Charles turned his attention to the rival southern realm of Aquitaine and crossed the Loire breaking the treaty with Duke Odo The Franks ransacked Aquitaine twice and captured Bourges although Odo retook it The Continuations of Fredegar allege that Odo called on assistance from the recently established emirate of al Andalus but there had been Arab raids into Aquitaine from the 720s onwards Indeed the anonymous Chronicle of 754 records a victory for Odo in 721 at the Battle of Toulouse while the Liber Pontificalis records that Odo had killed 375 000 Saracens 22 It is more likely that this invasion or raid took place in revenge for Odo s support for a rebel Berber leader named Munnuza Whatever the precise circumstances were it is clear that an army under the leadership of Abd al Rahman al Ghafiqi headed north and after some minor engagements marched on the wealthy city of Tours According to British medieval historian Paul Fouracre Their campaign should perhaps be interpreted as a long distance raid rather than the beginning of a war 23 They were however defeated by the army of Charles at the Battle of Tours known in France as the Battle of Poitiers at a location between the French cities of Tours and Poitiers in a victory described by the Continuations of Fredegar According to the historian Bernard Bachrach the Arab army mostly mounted failed to break through the Frankish infantry 24 News of this battle spread and may be recorded in Bede s Ecclesiastical History Book V ch 23 However it is not given prominence in Arabic sources from the period 25 Despite his victory Charles did not gain full control of Aquitaine and Odo remained duke until 735 Wars of 732 737 Edit Charles Martel s military campaigns in Aquitaine Septimania and Provence after the Battle of Tour Poitiers 734 742 Between his victory of 732 and 735 Charles reorganized the kingdom of Burgundy replacing the counts and dukes with his loyal supporters thus strengthening his hold on power He was forced by the ventures of Bubo Duke of the Frisians to invade independent minded Frisia again in 734 In that year he slew the duke at the Battle of the Boarn Charles ordered the Frisian pagan shrines destroyed and so wholly subjugated the populace that the region was peaceful for twenty years after In 735 Duke Odo of Aquitaine died Though Charles wished to rule the duchy directly and went there to elicit the submission of the Aquitanians the aristocracy proclaimed Odo s son Hunald I of Aquitaine as duke and Charles and Hunald eventually recognised each other s position Interregnum 737 741 EditIn 737 at the tail end of his campaigning in Provence and Septimania the Merovingian king Theuderic IV died Charles titling himself maior domus and princeps et dux Francorum did not appoint a new king and nobody acclaimed one The throne lay vacant until Charles death The interregnum the final four years of Charles life was relatively peaceful although in 738 he compelled the Saxons of Westphalia to submit and pay tribute and in 739 he checked an uprising in Provence where some rebels united under the leadership of Maurontus Charles used the relative peace to set about integrating the outlying realms of his empire into the Frankish church He erected four dioceses in Bavaria Salzburg Regensburg Freising and Passau and gave them Boniface as archbishop and metropolitan over all Germany east of the Rhine with his seat at Mainz Boniface had been under his protection from 723 on Indeed 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 In 739 Pope Gregory III begged Charles for his aid against Liutprand but Charles was loath to fight his onetime ally and ignored the plea Nonetheless the pope s request for Frankish protection showed how far Charles had come from the days when he was tottering on excommunication and set the stage for his son and grandson to assert themselves in the peninsula Death and transition in rule Edit 14th century depiction of the death of Charles Martel Charles Martel died on 22 October 741 at Quierzy sur Oise in what is today the Aisne departement in the Picardy region of France He was buried at Saint Denis Basilica in Paris 26 His territories had been divided among his adult sons a year earlier to Carloman he gave Austrasia Alemannia and Thuringia and to Pippin the Younger Neustria Burgundy Provence and Metz and Trier in the Mosel duchy Grifo was given several lands throughout the kingdom but at a later date just before Charles died 27 50 Legacy EditEarlier in his life Charles Martel had many internal opponents and felt the need to appoint his own kingly claimant Chlotar IV Later however the dynamics of rulership in Francia had changed and no hallowed Merovingian ruler was required Charles divided his realm among his sons without opposition though he ignored his young son Bernard For many historians Charles Martel laid the foundations for his son Pepin s rise to the Frankish throne in 751 and his grandson Charlemagne s imperial acclamation in 800 However for Paul Fouracre while Charles was the most effective military leader in Francia his career finished on a note of unfinished business 28 Charles Martel divides the realm between Pepin and Carloman Grandes Chroniques de France Bibliotheque Nationale Family and children Edit Charles Martel married twice his first wife being Rotrude of Treves daughter either of Lambert II Count of Hesbaye or of Leudwinus Count of Treves They had the following children Hiltrud Carloman 27 50 Landrade also rendered as Landres Auda also called Aldana or Alane Pepin the Short also called Pippin 27 50 Most of the children married and had issue Hiltrud married Odilo I Duke of Bavaria Landrade was once believed to have married a Sigrand Count of Hesbania but Sigrand s wife was more likely the sister of Rotrude Auda married Thierry IV Count of Autun and Toulouse Charles also married a second time to Swanhild and they had a child named Grifo 27 50 Charles Martel also had a known mistress Ruodhaid with whom he had Bernhard c 720 787 Hieronymus c 722 after 782 Remigius d 771 archbishop of Rouen 29 Reputation and historiography Edit Charles Martel depicted in the French book Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum by Guillaume Rouille published in 1553 Military victories Edit For early medieval authors Charles Martel was famous for his military victories Paul the Deacon for instance attributed a victory against the Saracens actually won by Odo of Aquitaine to Charles 30 However alongside this there soon developed a darker reputation for his alleged abuse of church property A ninth century text the Visio Eucherii possibly written by Hincmar of Reims portrayed Martel as suffering in hell for this reason 31 According to British medieval historian Paul Fouracre this was the single most important text in the construction of Charles Martel s reputation as a seculariser or despoiler of church lands 32 By the eighteenth century historians such as Edward Gibbon had begun to portray the Frankish leader as the saviour of Christian Europe from a full scale Islamic invasion In Gibbon s The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire he wonders whether without Charles victory Perhaps the interpretation of the Koran would now be taught in the schools of Oxford 33 In the nineteenth century the German historian Heinrich Brunner argued that Charles had confiscated church lands in order to fund military reforms that allowed him to defeat the Arab conquests in this way brilliantly combining two traditions about the ruler However Fouracre argued that there is not enough evidence to show that there was a decisive change either in the way in which the Franks fought or in the way in which they organised the resources needed to support their warriors 34 Many twentieth century European historians continued to develop Gibbon s perspectives such as French medievalist Christian Pfister who wrote in 1911 that Besides establishing a certain unity in Gaul Charles saved it from a great peril In 711 the Arabs had conquered Spain In 720 they crossed the Pyrenees seized Narbonensis a dependency of the kingdom of the Visigoths and advanced on Gaul By his able policy Odo succeeded in arresting their progress for some years but a new vali Abdur Rahman a member of an extremely fanatical sect resumed the attack reached Poitiers and advanced on Tours the holy town of Gaul In October 732 just 100 years after the death of Mahomet Charles gained a brilliant victory over Abdur Rahman who was called back to Africa by revolts of the Berbers and had to give up the struggle After his victory Charles took the offensive 3 Similarly William E Watson who wrote of the battle s importance in Frankish and world history in 1993 suggested that Had Charles Martel suffered at Tours Poitiers the fate of King Roderick at the Rio Barbate it is doubtful that a do nothing sovereign of the Merovingian realm could have later succeeded where his talented major domus had failed Indeed as Charles was the progenitor of the Carolingian line of Frankish rulers and grandfather of Charlemagne one can even say with a degree of certainty that the subsequent history of the West would have proceeded along vastly different currents had Abd al Rahman been victorious at Tours Poitiers in 732 35 And in 1993 the influential political scientist Samuel Huntington saw the battle of Tours as marking the end of the Arab and Moorish surge west and north 36 Other recent historians however argue that the importance of the battle is dramatically overstated both for European history in general and for Charles Martel s reign in particular This view is typified by Alessandro Barbero who in 2004 wrote Today historians tend to play down the significance of the battle of Poitiers pointing out that the purpose of the Arab force defeated by Charles Martel was not to conquer the Frankish kingdom but simply to pillage the wealthy monastery of St Martin of Tours 37 Similarly in 2002 Tomaz Mastnak wrote The continuators of Fredegar s chronicle who probably wrote in the mid eighth century pictured the battle as just one of many military encounters between Christians and Saracens moreover as only one in a series of wars fought by Frankish princes for booty and territory One of Fredegar s continuators presented the battle of Poitiers as what it really was an episode in the struggle between Christian princes as the Carolingians strove to bring Aquitaine under their rule 38 More recently the memory of Charles Martel has been appropriated by far right and white nationalist groups such as the Charles Martel Group in France and by Australian Brenton Harrison Tarrant the perpetrator of the Christchurch mosque shootings at Al Noor Mosque and Linwood Islamic Centre in Christchurch New Zealand in 2019 39 The memory of Charles Martel is a topic of debate in contemporary French politics on both the right and the left 40 Order of the Genet Edit In the seventeenth century a legend emerged that Charles Martel had formed the first regular order of knights in France In 1620 Andre Favyn stated without providing a source that among the spoils Charles Martel s forces captured after the Battle of Tours were many genets raised for their fur and several of their pelts 41 Charles Martel gave these furs to leaders amongst his army forming the first order of knighthood the Order of the Genet Favyn s claim was then repeated and elaborated in later works in English for instance by Elias Ashmole in 1672 42 and James Coats in 1725 43 References Edit This sculpture was located in the Palace of Versailles By Debaye pere sculpted marble 1839 first displayed at the Salon in 1839 Height 2 09 m Soulie 1855 op cit Fouracre Paul 2000 The Age of Charles Martel Harlow England Longman pp 1 55 ISBN 0582064759 OCLC 43634337 a b Pfister Christian 1911 Charles Martel In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 942 943 Schulman Jana K 2002 The Rise of the Medieval World 500 1300 A Biographical Dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group p 101 ISBN 0 313 30817 9 Cawthorne Nigel 2004 Military Commanders The 100 Greatest Throughout History Enchanted Lion Books pp 52 53 ISBN 1 59270 029 2 Kibler William W Zinn Grover A 1995 Medieval France An Encyclopedia Routledge pp 205 206 ISBN 0 8240 4444 4 Fouracre Paul Gerberding Richard A eds 1996 Late Merovingian France history and hagiography 640 720 Translated by Paul Fouracre and Richard A Gerberding Manchester Manchester University Press p 93 ISBN 0719047900 OCLC 32699266 White Jr Lynn 1962 Medieval technology and social change London England Oxford University Press pp 2 14 Mclaughlin William 732 Battle of Tours Charles Martel the Hammer preserves Western Christianity War History Online Fouracre Paul 2000 The Age of Charles Martel London Longman ISBN 0 582 06475 9 Accessed 2 August 2015 page needed Commire Anne ed 2002 Alphaida c 654 c 714 Women in World History A Biographical Encyclopedia Waterford Connecticut Yorkin Publications ISBN 0 7876 4074 3 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Hanson Victor Davis 18 December 2007 Carnage and Culture Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 307 42518 8 Commire Anne 24 September 2015 2002 Alphaida c 654 c 714 Women in World History A Biographical Encyclopedia HighBeam Research Waterford Connecticut Yorkin Publications Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 24 September 2020 Joch Waltraud 1999 Legitimitat und Integration Untersuchungen zu den Anfangen Karl Martells Husum Germany Matthiesen Verlag Gerberding Richard A October 2002 Review of Legitimitat und Integration Untersuchungen zu den Anfangen Karl Martells by Waltraud Joch Speculum Vol 77 no 4 pp 1322 1323 a b c Kurth Godefroid The Franks The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 6 New York Robert Appleton Company 1909 Costambeys Marios Matthew Innes amp MacLean Simon 2011 The Carolingian World p 43 Cambridge GBR Cambridge University Press see 1 accessed 2 August 2015 2 Daniel Gabriel The History of France G Strahan 1726 p 148 Fouracre Paul 2000 The Age of Charles Martel Harlow England Longman p 61 ISBN 0582064759 OCLC 43634337 Gerberding Richard 716 A Crucial Year For Charles Martel Medievalists net November 3 2014 3 November 2014 Strauss Gustave Louis M 1854 Moslem and Frank or Charles Martel and the rescue of Europe Oxford GBR Oxford University Press see 3 accessed 2 August 2015 page needed Fouracre Paul 2000 The Age of Charles Martel Harlow England Longman pp 84 5 ISBN 0582064759 OCLC 43634337 Fouracre Paul 2000 The Age of Charles Martel Harlow England Longman p 88 ISBN 0582064759 OCLC 43634337 Bachrach Bernard S 2001 Early Carolingian warfare prelude to empire Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press pp 170 178 ISBN 0 8122 3533 9 OCLC 43095805 Christys Ann 4 April 2019 Sons of Ishmael Turn Back In Esders Stefan Fox Yaniv Hen Yitzhak Sarti Laury eds Sons of Ishmael Turn Back East and West in the Early Middle Ages 1 ed Cambridge University Press pp 318 328 doi 10 1017 9781316941072 021 ISBN 9781316941072 S2CID 166413345 Retrieved 7 May 2019 History of the Monument BASILIQUE CATHEDRALE DE SAINT DENIS BASILIQUE CATHEDRALE DE SAINT DENIS Retrieved 27 January 2017 a b c d Riche Pierre 1993 The Carolingians A Family Who Forged Europe Michael Idomir Allen transl Philadelphia PA USA University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 0 8122 1342 4 see 4 accessed 2 August 2015 Paul Fouracre Writing about Charles Martel in Law Laity and Solidarities essays in honour of Susan Reynolds ed Pauline Stafford et al Manchester 2001 pp 12 26 Holweck Frederick George 1924 Holweck Frederick George Remigius Remi A Biographical Dictionary of the Saints B Herder Book Company 1924 p 852 Fouracre Paul 2000 The Age of Charles Martel Harlow England Longman p 85 ISBN 0582064759 OCLC 43634337 Wood I N 1994 The Merovingian kingdoms 450 751 London Longman ISBN 0582218780 OCLC 27172340 pp 275 6 Fouracre Paul 2000 The Age of Charles Martel Harlow England Longman p 124 ISBN 0582064759 OCLC 43634337 Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Fouracre Paul 2000 The Age of Charles Martel Harlow England Longman p 149 ISBN 0582064759 OCLC 43634337 Watson William 1993 The Battle of Tours Poitiers Revisited Providence Studies in Western Civilization 2 Huntington Samuel P 1993 The Clash of Civilizations Foreign Affairs 72 3 22 49 doi 10 2307 20045621 ISSN 0015 7120 JSTOR 20045621 Barbero Alessandro 2004 Charlemagne father of a continent Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0520239431 OCLC 52773483 p 10 Mastnak Tomaz 2002 Crusading peace Christendom the Muslim world and Western political order Berkeley Calif University of California Press ISBN 9780520925991 OCLC 52861403 Perspective The fake history that fueled the accused Christchurch shooter Washington Post Retrieved 4 June 2019 Blanc William 2022 Charles Martel et la Bataille de Poitiers ISBN 9782377292356 Favyn Andre 1620 Le Theatre d honneur et de chevalerie Ashmole Elias 1672 The Institution Laws and Ceremonies of the Most Noble Order of the Garter J Macock p 97 James Coats 1725 A New Dictionary of Heraldry Jer Batley pp 163 4 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles Martel Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Charles Martel Ian Meadows The Arabs in Occitania A sketch giving the context of the conflict from the Arab point of view https web archive org web 20051222052229 http www standin se fifteen07a htm Poke s edition of Creasy s 15 Most Important Battles Ever Fought According to Edward Shepherd Creasy Chapter VII The Battle of Tours A D 732 Richard Hooker Civil War and the Umayyads Leaders and Battles Database The Battle of Tours BBC Radio 4 In Our Time 2014 Robert W Martin The Battle of Tours is still felt today from About com Medieval Sourcebook Arabs Franks and the Battle of Tours 732 Arabs Franks and the Battle of Tours 732 Three Accounts from the Internet Medieval Sourcebook Medieval Sourcebook Gregory II to Charles Martel 739 Medieval Lands Project Franks Merovingian Nobility Pfister Christian 1911 Charles Martel Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed pp 942 943 Charles MartelCarolingian DynastyBorn 676 686 688 or 690 Died 741Regnal titlesPreceded byPepin II the Middle Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia717 741 Succeeded byCarlomanPreceded byRagenfrid Mayor of the Palace of Neustria717 741 Succeeded byPepin the ShortPreceded byTheuderic IV King of the Franks Acting 737 741 Succeeded byChilderic IIIPortals Christianity War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Martel amp oldid 1139133256, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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