Bernard Bachrach - Merovingian Military Organization
Bernard Bachrach - Merovingian Military Organization
Bernard Bachrach - Merovingian Military Organization
Military Organization
481-751
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Merovingian
Military Organization
481-751
BERNARD S. BACHRACH
vii
PREFACE
Through their encouragement and advice many people have
made my work on this book both easier and more pleasant. I
would like, however, to make special mention of Professors F. L.
Ganshof, Walter Goffart, R. S. Hoyt, and Bryce Lyon who read
the entire manuscript at one or another stage in its history and
provided valuable criticism. It would be less than fair, in addi-
tion, if I did not share with my wife Debby the credit for bring-
ing this work to completion. Despite her obligations as wife,
mother, and scholar she found the time to read proofs and help
with the compilation of the index. Lastly, it gives me pleasure to
note that this study was awarded the McKnight Foundation Prize
in European History in 1968.
BERNABD S. BACHRACH
November 3,1971
St. Paul, Minn.
viii
Contents
Chapter I
Clovis: 481–511 3
Chapter II
The Sons of Clovis: 511–561 18
Chapter III
Clovis's Grandsons: 561-593 36
Chapter IV
The Last of the Ruling Merovingians: 593–638 74
Chapter V
The Rois Fainéants and the Mayors of the Palace: 638–751 92
Chapter VI
Conclusion 113
Appendix
The Byzantine's View of the Franks 131
Bibliography 141
Index 151
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Abbreviations
AHR American Historical Review
BEC Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes
CRAI Comptes Rendus de I'Académie des Inscriptions
et Belles-Lettres
HZ Historische Zeitschrift
JRS Journal of Roman Studies
MA Le Moyen Âge
MGH Monumenta Germaniae Historica
AA Auctores Antiquissimi
Ep Epistolae
LL Leges
SS Scriptores
SSRL Scriptores Rerum Langobardicarum
SSRM Scriptores Rerum Merovingicarum
MIÖG Mitteilungen des Instituts für Österreichische Ge-
schichtsforschung
RE A Revue des Études Anciennes
RH Revue Historique
RPRH Revue Beige de Philologie et d'Histoire
ZRG Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung fur Rechtsgeschichte
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Merovingian
Military Organization
481-751
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CHAPTER I
Clovis: 481-511
3
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
4
CLOVIS
5
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
direct conflict with those of the Alamans along the middle Rhine
and those of the Burgundians to the south.11
In 496 the Alamans moved into Prankish territory, and the
various Salian and Ripuarian reguli seem to have joined their
followings under Clovis's leadership to stop this invasion. At
Tolbiac, some thirty miles south of Cologne, the two armies
met and the Alamans were defeated. Though Tolbiac was a
formidable fortress, it seems that this battle, unlike several of
Clovis's previous actions, did not involve siege warfare. The exact
nature of the battle, however, aside from its outcome, remains
unknown.12
Clovis's victory at Tolbiac was of much greater consequence
than merely the turning back of an enemy invasion; his ad-
herence to Christianity and subsequent baptism were by and
large directly related to this campaign. According to Gregory
of Tours's account, Clovis seems to have undergone a religious
experience: the Alamans were treating Clovis's forces roughly
and he asked the Christian God for help, promising in effect
that if his enemy were defeated he would become a Christian.13
Although it is not impossible that Clovis underwent a reli-
gious experience, it may be suggested that the interpretation of
Clovis's postvictory baptism by Gregory or those he used as his
sources resulted more from sincere wish fulfillment than from
solid evidence. The political and military realities of Clovis's
situation and his personality (even as depicted by Gregory)
would reasonably lead us to conclude that the Prankish chief
found motivation for his actions in other than spiritual demands.
Clovis is known to have believed that if he were baptized he
would lose the support of many of his pagan followers. To have
been baptized in spite of this implies strong motivation indeed.14
"Bachrach, "Clovis's Reign," p. 21. Cf. Kurth, Clovis, I, 266ff.
13
Gregory, Hist., II, 30. The date of the battle of Tolbiac and Clovis's
baptism, which seems to be intimately connected with it, is a major prob-
lem in the chronology of Clovis's reign. On this see Bachrach, "Clovis's
Reign," p. 27, and the bibliography cited there.
13
Gregory, Hist., II, 30.
" Ibid., II, 31: "At ille [Clovis] ait: 'Libenter te, sanctissime pater, audie-
bam; set restat unam, quod populus, qui me sequitur, non patitur reliquere
deus suos; sed vado et loquor eius iuxta verbum tuum.'"
6
CLOVIS
It may be hypothesized that Clovis accepted Christianity and
attempted to impose it upon his pagan followers to ensure the
support of the Christian Gallo-Romans, especially the lay and
ecclesiastical magnates who controlled great wealth and power.
It should be remembered that the Alamans, Clovis's enemies,
were pagans like the Franks and that the Gallo-Romans, while
surely hostile to Arian barbarians like the Visigoths, would
find little difference between one pagan group and another.
Shortly after Clovis had come to power, he had received a
letter from Remigius, bishop of Rheims, indicating to the young
king that he would find it advantageous to have the support of
the Gallo-Roman church. The bishop's letter even implied that
Clovis should show deference to the bishops and ask their advice;
a meeting of minds between the young ruler and the influential
churchmen, wrote Remigius, would assure a prosperous reign.
This letter may be regarded as more a veiled threat than a hum-
ble request to a pagan ruler for religious toleration, for the
Gallo-Roman church was the powerful leader of the Christian
community and the bishops, many of whom were from old and
established families, were not to be slighted.15 Men like Hilarius,
bishop of Aries, who during the previous generation had led his
band of armed retainers contrary to imperial proscription, could
be either useful supporters or very dangerous enemies of a
young and untried barbarian monarch. Bishops Quintianus of
Rodez, Volusianus of Tours, Aprunculus of Langres, and Verus
of Tours had caused so much trouble for the Visigothic and
Burgundian leaders that ultimately they had to be driven from
their sees. The details of their opposition to such barbarians as
the Visigoths and Burgundians are unknown, but it is doubtful
that they went as far as Bishop Galactorius of Beam who was
killed while leading an armed force to support Clovis against
the Visigoths. On the other hand, these bishops may have been
more like Cautinus of Auvergne who used his armed supporters
to pillage his neighbors.16
M
MGH epist. Merov. et Karl, II, 113.
16
N. Vol., 17, 1, for Hilarius and his armed followers. Gregory, Hist., II,
36, for Quintianus; II, 22, and X, 31, for Volusianus; II, 23, for Aprunculus;
7
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
X, 31, for Verus; and V. Galoot., p. 434, for Galactorius. For discussions of
this see Kurth, Clovis, II, 84-85, and Samuel Dill, Roman Society in Gaul
in the Merovingian Age (London, 1926), p. 95. Cf. E. A. Thompson, The
Goths in Spain (Oxford, 1969), pp. 26-27. For Cautinus see Gregory, Hist.,
IV, 12, and the discussion below in ch. 2, n. 23.
"Gregory, Hist., II, 27. The legend of the recalcitrant warrior and the
ewer which is interwoven into this episode may perhaps symbolize a fac-
tional struggle among Clovis's followers concerning the church, a struggle
which seems to have had later repercussions. See G. Kurth, Histoire poeti-
que des Merovingiens (Paris, 1893), pp. 223-224, and Kurth, Clovis, I, 244.
8
CLOVIS
to the Prankish chief at Tolbiac that his military situation would
prosper if he became a Christian.18
In any event, Clovis judged correctly when he concluded that
his baptism would not be supported fully by his pagan followers.
Of the 6000 or so Prankish warriors who formed the warbands
of the reguli, only some 3000 followed Clovis to the baptismal
font. The other half joined with Ragnachar, the regains of Cam-
brai, who remained a pagan.19 Although Clovis had probably lost
about one half of his Prankish followers, he was still able, in the
years following his baptism, to continue his military activities.
In 500 or 501 relations between Godigisel and Gundobad, the
Burgundian kings, became strained and the former asked Clovis
for military aid against the latter. In return for this aid, Godigisel
agreed to give Clovis a yearly payment as well as a portion of the
Burgundian kingdom. When Clevis's army entered Burgundy,
Gundobad told his brother of the invasion and asked him to take
the field against the Prankish ruler. To Gundobad's surprise,
when the three armies arrived outside of Dijon, he was attacked
by his brother as well as by Clovis. Though his army was de-
feated, Gundobad managed to escape to the fortified city of
Avignon.20
After this battle, Godigisel retired to Vienne, but Clovis led
his followers against Gundobad at Avignon and laid siege to the
fortress, presumably with the siege engines (instrumenta belli]
with which he had begun the campaign. Clovis's men devastated
the area around the city, pillaging and burning everything within
reach. But a certain Aridius, a Gallo-Roman magnate in the
service of Gundobad, gained Clovis's confidence and convinced
18
L.H.F., ch. 15. For further discussion of Aurelianus see n. 41 below.
Cf. Wallace-Hadrill, Long-Hatred Kings, p. 168.
19
V. Remigii, ch. 15: "Multi denique de Francorum exercitu, necdum ad
fidem conversi, sum regis parente Ragnario ultra Sumnam fluvium aliquandiu
deguerunt, donee, Christi gratia cooperante, gloriosis potitus victoriis, eundem
Ragnarium, flagitiis turpitudinum inservientem, vinctum a Francis sibi
traditum, rex Hludowicus occidit et omnem Francorum populum per beatum
Remigium ad fidem converti et baptizari obtinuit." Gregory, Hist., II, 31:
"De exercito vero eius baptizati sunt amplius tria milia." Dill, Merovingian
Age, pp. 77, 80; Bachrach, "Clovis's Reign," pp. 27-28; and Wallace-Had-
rill, Long-Haired Kings, p. 170.
20
Gregory, Hist., II, 32.
9
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
him that Avignon could not be taken. Peace was then negotiated;
Gundobad agreed to pay Clovis a yearly tribute and the latter
returned home with his followers.21
A year or two later Clovis led his forces into Armorica, the
area between the Seine and the Loire. Unlike his previous raids
into this area (which may have taken place during the late 480s),
this campaign seems to have been aimed at subjugating the Ar-
morici. Clevis's forces, however, were defeated. Yet the Armorici,
who, like Clovis, were Christians, desired cordial relations with
him to counterbalance the hostile Arian Visigoths who coveted
the land north of the Loire. Therefore, an accord was arranged
by which Clovis came to rule the various peoples of Armorica
and the military strength of the area was integrated into the
Merovingian military.22
Among the inhabitants of the Tractus Armoricani who joined
Clovis's military following were the Alans, who dominated the
Orleanais and the area to the north, Gallo-Roman magnates and
their adherents, former Roman soldiers and their descendants
who had maintained their military organization, Bretons, im-
perial military colonists (laeti) from Chartres, Bayeux, Coutance,
Le Mans, and Rennes, and Rome's Saxon allies of Bayeux.23 Not
long after acquiring the support of the inhabitants of Armorica,
Clovis again went to war against the Alamans, who had regained
some of their previous strength during the decade of disunity
among the Prankish reguli following Clovis's baptism. No details
of the campaign survive other than the fact that Clovis was
victorious. After this victory some of the defeated Alamans fled
to the lands of Theodoric the Great, while others remained
21
Ibid.
^Procopius H.W., V, xii, 13ff. On this text see Bachrach, "Clovis's
Reign," pp. 28-29.
""Procopius, H.W., V, xii, 16ff. On the Alans see Bernard S. Bachrach,
"The Origin of Armorican Chivalry," Technology and Culture, X (1969),
166-171, and "The Alans in Gaul," Traditio, XXIII (1967), 476-489. For
the laeti see Notitia Dignitatum, oc., XLII, 33, 34, 35, 36. On the survival
of Roman units in Gaul see Bernard S. Bachrach, "A Note on Alites,"
Byzantinische Zeitschrift, LXI (1968), 35.
10
CLOVIS
under Merovingian domination and ultimately served in the
armed forces of Clovis's successors.24
In 507, after having obtained the consent of his magnates,
Clovis launched an invasion of the Visigothic kingdom. The
Merovingian king made a concerted effort to keep the support
of the church by forbidding his troops to plunder its possessions.
One of Clovis's orders restricted his men to the use of only grass
and water in provisioning their mounts on the church lands they
traversed. Clovis's horsemen generally seem to have abided by
this order, although present knowledge of it may well have sur-
vived because of the drastic manner in which a violator was
punished. Much to the joy of such clerical observers as Gregory
of Tours, Clovis enforced this order by killing the man who vio-
lated it with his own hand.25
Though Clovis's advance south was slowed somewhat by the
rain-swollen Vienne River, his forces reached the Poitiers area
and engaged the Visigoths at Vouille, a plain to the south of
the city on the Roman road to Nantes. Clovis's archers and
spear throwers, apparently deployed at the rear of his formation,
showered the Goths with missiles from a distance. While this
barrage battered the enemy, other elements of Clovis's force
advanced and engaged the Goths in hand-to-hand combat. Clovis
is alleged to have killed Alaric, the Visigothic king, in single
combat, and only just escaped death himself when the speed of
his horse and the strength of his cuirass combined to thwart the
efforts of two Gothic warriors. The Visigoths turned and fled
and Clovis's forces won the day.26
Clovis followed up his triumph over the Visigoths by sending
his son Theuderic to seize the cities held by the Goths in the
south of Gaul. Albi, Rodez, and Clermont all fell under Mero-
24
F. Lot, "La victoire sur les Alamans et la conversion de Clovis," RBPH,
XVII (1938), 63-69, and Bachrach, "Clovis's Reign," p. 30. Cf. A. Van de
Vyver, "L'unique victoire centre les Alamans et la conversion de Clovis en
506," RBPH, XVII (1938) 793-813.
25
Gregory, Hist., II, 37: ". . . ut nullus de regione ilia aliud, quam her-
barum alimenta aquamque praesumeret."
28
Ibid.: "Chlodovechus rex cum Alarico rege Gothorum in compo Vogla-
dense decimo ab urbe Pictava milario convenit, et confligentibus his eminus,
resistunt comminus illi."
11
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
12
CLOVIS
13
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
14
CLOVIS
15
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
16
CLOVIS
and retainers.46 With such assets, and protected in his fortified
villa, the Gallo-Roman magnate was a formidable figure in local
affairs as well as on the battlefield.47 With the support of this
class of men and their followers, Clovis could provide profes-
sional fighting men for local defense and for the preservation of
law and order as the empire had done before him. For they were
an important element in the development of royal power.
The heterogeneous nature of the Merovingian military — war-
bands of the reguli, armed followings of the magnates, descen-
dants of Roman soldiers who preserved their military customs,
laeti, and Rome's barbarian allies — gave Clovis an experienced
professional fighting force which could campaign throughout
the year and was not restricted by the demands of agricultural
labor as a part-time army of warrior-farmers would be. With a
substantial mounted force of Alans, Sarmatians, Taifals, and some
Franks and Alamans, Clevis's troops could successfully fight hand
to hand against the Visigothic cavalry. His archers and spear
throwers, probably drawn from erstwhile Roman units and from
his own Franks, provided firepower on the field.48 In siege war-
fare, undertaken by Clevis's forces on numerous occasions — at
Verdun, Paris, Avignon, Aries, Carcassonne, and Angouleme —
siege engines and other apparatus were probably employed.
Not only did Clevis's troops have the offensive capability to
fight effectively on the open field as well as against fortified posi-
tions, but they also had the organizational flexibility both to fight
year-round campaigns and to serve as garrisons in the many sur-
viving fortified cities and castra in Gaul.49 It can therefore be
concluded that Clovis resuscitated the remains of the imperial
military in Gaul and created the Merovingian military.
"Sidonius Apollinaris, ep. I, 6, 2: ". . . dein quod equis armis, veste
sumptu famulicio instructus solum. . . ."
47
MacMullen, Soldiers and Civilians, pp. 143, 147, and C. Jullian, His-
toire de la Gaule Romaine (Paris, 1928), VIII, 139ff especially 141. Mac-
Mullen, p. 147, n. 101, feels that some of the fortified villas identified by
Jullian are dubious.
48
Natitia Dignitatum, oc., VII, 75, and Gregory, Hist., II, 9: "... sagittas
turmentorum ritu effundere inlitas herbarum venensis. . . ."
49
R. M. Butler, "Late Roman Town Walls in Gaul," The Archaeological
Journal, CXVI (1959), 48-50.
17
CHAPTER II
The Sons
of Clovis: 511-561
W HEN Clovis died in 511, his kingdom was divided among his
four sons, Theuderic, Childebert, Chlodomer, and Chlotar.
The first military encounter in which the Merovingian kings en-
gaged after their father's death (at least the first of which some
record has survived) was against a force of Danish raiders who
invaded northern Gaul about 515. The Danes had come by sea
and had carried out a successful raid in which they acquired a
good deal of loot. The main force had returned to the ships and
only their king, Chlochiliach, remained on land, presumably
with a small group of his armed followers. Gregory of Tours
notes that Theudebert, having been sent by his father, Theuderic,
to repel the invaders, met them in a sea battle, defeated them
decisively, killed Chlochiliach, and recovered the booty from
the enemy ships.1
Several points are worth noting about this encounter. King
Theuderic, or at least his son Theudebert, had at his disposal
ships capable of engaging in sea warfare and men with the ability
to defeat a seagoing people at their own game. Also, Theudebert's
troops are described by Gregory as being a validus exercitus or
1
Gregory, Hist., Ill, 3: "Quod cum Theudorico nuntiatum fuisset, quod
scilicet regio eius fuerit ab extraneis devastata, Theudobertum, filium suum,
in illis partibus cum valido exercitu ac magno armorum apparatu direxit.
Qui, interfectu rege, hostibus navali proelio superatis oppraemit omneque
rapinam terrae restituit."
18
THE SONS OF CLOVIS
strong force "cum . . . magno armorum apparatu" — with exten-
sive military equipment. There is no record, however, of the
Franks as an ethnic group taking part in any noteworthy naval
activity either before or after this event. It should be recalled
that when Clovis besieged Paris twenty-five years earlier, he
did not have sufficient naval forces to keep the city from being
supplied by water. All this suggests that at least a part of Theu-
debert's validus exercitus was not composed of Franks. The
abundance of sophisticated military equipment noted by Gregory
also implies that there was probably a non-Frankish element in
Theudebert's army on this occasion.2
The sources provide little information concerning the Mero-
vingian military between the defeat of the Danes in 515 and
Theuderic's Thuringian campaign in 531. Shortly after Theude-
bert's encounter with the Danes, Theuderic aided one of the
Thuringian kings in a civil war; in return for this support he
had been promised a share in whatever land was conquered.
Although territory was taken, Theuderic, much to his dismay,
did not receive his share.3 Some fifteen years later, he felt ready
to take not only what he regarded was his, but more. He enlisted
the help of his brother Chlotar I and Theudebert, assembled his
forces, and moved into Thuringia. The Thuringians, learning of
the Franks' approach, dug ditches in the field where they knew
a battle would be joined and covered them with sod so that the
approaching Prankish horsemen could not see the trap. When
the Franks charged across the field to attack the Thuringians,
who were waiting for them on the far side, the horses were
tripped up by the ditches. This stratagem broke the momentum
of the Frankish cavalry charge, but Theuderic's forces managed
to recover and finally defeated the Thuringians.4
3
Cf. E. Zollner, Geschichte der Franken (Munich, 1970), p. 153.
3
Gregory, Hist., Ill, 4.
4
Ibid., Ill, 7: "Theudoricus autem, Chlothacharium fratrem et Theudo-
bertum filium in solatio suo adsumptos, cum exercito abiit. Thoringi vero
venientibus Francis dolos praeparant. In campum enim, quo certamen agi
debebant, fossas effodiunt, quarum ora operta denso cispete planum adsimi-
lant campum. In his ergo foveis, cum pugnare coepissent, multi Francorum
equites conruerunt, et fuit eis vald© inpedimentum; sed cognitum hunc
dolum, observare coeperunt. Denique cum se Thoringi caedi vehementer
19
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
20
THE SONS OF CLOVIS
siege. At Chastel-Marlhac part of the garrison became overcon-
fident, and in attempting to sack the enemy camp, it was cap-
tured. The defenders had to ransom the captives for a triens
each.5 When Theuderic was satisfied that he had taught the
Arvernians a lesson, he returned to the north. He granted lands
in Auvergne to his kinsman Sigivald, who in turn was to garrison
the area with his followers.6
It is interesting to note here that the fortifications of Chastel-
Marlhac and Vollore, with their garrisons of laeti, mark direct
continuity with the Roman past, both in the physical structures
being defended and in their defenders, who were a corpus pub-
licum under the empire and had passed with the fortifications to
the Merovingian kings. These laeti may also be identified as
descendants of Sueve military colonists stationed in that area and
listed in the Notitia Dignitatum.7
Theuderic's stratagems in the Auvergne campaign had proved
to be superior to his strategy and made up for his forces' in-
ability to reduce fortified positions by siege. Such also was the
case in the Munderic affair, Munderic was a Frank who owned
large estates probably in the region of Vitry-le-Brule near Cha-
lons-sur-Marne; he claimed to be of royal blood and tried to
obtain a part of Theuderic's kingdom. He gathered around him-
self a band of armed men who swore to be his faithful follow-
ers. Theuderic attempted to lure him to his court, but failed
and therefore ordered a force to be sent against the pretender.
Munderic withdrew with his followers behind the walls of Vitry
(Victoriacus castrum). Theuderic's army laid siege to the fortress,
but because they lacked siege engines and even the magnus
aparatus armorum which Theudebert had employed against the
Danes, they could only hurl their spears at the defenders on the
walls. After seven days of such futile activity, Theuderic was in-
5
Gregory, Hist., Ill, 11; HI, 12, 13; Gregory, M, ch. 13.
"Gregory, JuL, ch. 14: "Tune Sigivaldus cum rege praepotens cum omni
familia sua in Arverna regione ex regis jussu migravit. . . ." See Bernard S.
Bachrach, "Charles Martel, Mounted Shock Combat, the Stirrup, and Feu-
dalism," Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History, VII (1970), 68-72.
7
Notitia Dignitatum, oc., LXII, 44: "Praefectus laetorum gentilium Sue-
vorum, Arumbernos Aquitanicae primae."
21
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
formed by his commander that it was impossible to take the
fortress.8 Theuderic then sent a group led by Arigisel, one of
his personal retainers, to entice Munderic out of Vitry. After
taking many oaths of peace and friendship, Arigisel managed to
lure Munderic out of the fortress; once outside he and his fol-
lowers were cut down in a bloody hand-to-hand combat.9
Theuderic's appointment of Arigisel to lead this expedition indi-
cates that the king had a structure of command within his mili-
tary organization. Arigisel's mission represents the second time,
so far as can be ascertained, that Theuderic delegated command
to someone other than his son. The first to have been so dis-
tinguished was Sigivald, who had been given a command in
Auvergne.
In contrast to the weakness of Theuderic's Prankish followers
in siege warfare, the forces from the south of Gaul led by his
son Theudebert and his brothers Chlotar and Childebert were
considerably more effective in siege operations. This may be at-
tributed to the fact that they recruited their troops from the
more Romanized parts of Gaul. Theudebert and his army con-
quered the Gothic fortress city of Beziers in southern Gaul, and
then seized and sacked the fortress of Dio to the north of Be-
ziers. Cabriers capitulated to Theudebert after learning the fate
of Dio.10
The most important result of successful siege warfare was the
conquest of the Burgundian kingdom by Chlotar and Childebert
in 534. By besieging Autun, the headquarters of Godomar, the
Burgundian king, they were able to take the city, causing the
monarch to flee. The ultimate consequence was the subjugation
of the entire Burgundian realm to Merovingian control.11 With
this conquest, the Merovingian kings added the lands, wealth,
population, and military resources of the Burgundian kingdom
to their own holdings. A more important effect of this victory,
however, was the further penetration of Roman influences into
8
Gregory, Hist, III, 14.
• Ibid.; Fred., Ill, 36.
10
Gregory, Hist,, III, 21. See Longnon, Geographic, pp. 611-612.
"Gregory, Hist., Ill, 11.
22
THE SONS OF CLOVIS
the Merovingian military and political structure. The Burgun-
dian military had for some time seen the syncretism of bar-
barian and Roman institutions. From the second half of the fifth
century, Gallo-Romans served in the Burgundian army. In addi-
tion there was at least one noteworthy unit in the Burgundian
military which was composed completely of Gallo-Romans.12
The important men of the kingdom, Gallo-Roman and Bur-
gundian magnates alike, had for a long time supported private
bands of armed retainers. Sidonius Apollinaris, whose writings
provide a great deal of information on late Roman society in
the Burgundian kingdom, praises his son-in-law Ecdicius for
using his private army against the Visigoths as a public service.
On another occasion, however, Sidonius complains bitterly to
his friend Thaumastus about certain important men whose
access to the Burgundian king endangers the favored position
usually enjoyed by the Gallo-Roman senatorials. Among Sidoni-
us's criticisms of these men is their lack of noblesse oblige. In
this vein he contends that they not only failed to provide their
military retainers with the stipend which was due them, but
also deprived their bodyguards of the sustenance they required.
He writes: "hi sunt, qui invident . . . stipendia paludatis . . .
praetorianis sportulas. . . ,"13 Of course, Sidonius is exaggerat-
ing the degeneracy of his enemies. These men surely would be
the last to weaken their positions by neglecting their military
retainers and bodyguards. The sportulae which were due the
bodyguards (whom Sidonius pedantically calls praetoriani) may
be compared to the buccellata from which the buccettarii got
their name. A more prosaic writer might have used a term like
sportularii to describe these guards because they were provided
with sportulae. The military retainers who received the stipen-
12
L. Musset, Les invasiones, 2nd ed. (Paris, 1969), pp. 114ff, 247ff;
E. A. Thompson, "The Barbarian Kingdoms in Gaul and Spain," Notting-
ham Mediaeval Studies, VII (1963), 9. L.B. (prim, const.}, no. 5; Lex Rom.
Burg., XLV, 3; and V. Eptadii, ch. 12, for the Roman force in the Bur-
gundian army. Procopius, H.W., V, xiii, 3, for the use of Burgundian mili-
tary forces by the Merovingian kings.
13
Sidonius Apollinaris, ep. V, 7, 3. On Sidonius see C. E. Stevens, Sidonius
Apottinaris and His Age (Oxford, 1933).
23
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
24
THE SONS OF CLOVIS
in return for their services as garrison commanders similar to
centenarii.17
If the simple Burgundian freeman, because of his legal status,
had ever owed military service in a general levy of some kind,
such an obligation probably had disappeared before the end of
the fifth century when the Burgundian laws were written down,
for they make no mention of this military responsibility. It may
be hypothesized that all able-bodied men in the kingdom could
be called upon to take up whatever arms might be at hand for
the needs of local defense, and it seems equally likely that when
a campaign in which plunder might be obtained was to be un-
dertaken, at least some hardy souls would heed the call of
adventure, though they were not required to do so by either
law or custom. By and large, however, the backbone of the
Burgundian military, as it passed under Merovingian domination
in 534, was not made up of these temporary soldiers, but of
laeti and milites, erstwhile imperial fighting men, and the
armed followings of the royal family and magnates.
After the conquest of the Burgundian kingdom, the Mero-
vingian monarchs might have concentrated their efforts on the
invasion of new lands. Instead, they insisted upon fighting
among themselves. In the same year that the Burgundians yield-
ed to the military might of the Merovingians, Gregory reports,
Theudebert and Childebert agreed to attack Chlotar. Fortui-
tously for the new allies, they learned that Chlotar was traveling
southward through his kingdom; on his journey he had to cross
Childebert's lands. The allies caught Chlotar and his small fol-
lowing off guard on the south bank of the Seine, just across
from the village of Caudebec, about twenty-two miles west-
northwest of Rouen.18 Realizing that he could neither escape
nor defeat his enemies' superior force in an open battle, Chlotar
retreated into the Forest of Arelaunum where he ordered trees
17
Butler, "Late Roman Town Walls in Gaul," pp. 48-50; Gregory, V.P.,
VII, 4; "Cumque milites cum aequitibus praecedentes, cum post terga
traherent vinctum, ad locum ubi confessoris artus quieverant pervenerunl."
Notitia Dignitatem, oc., XLII, 69, 70; XXXVI, 5. Grenier, Manuel d'
archeologte, V, 400, n. 2. L.B., I, especially no. 4.
"Gregory, Hist,, III, 28; L.H.F., ch. 25. Longnon, Geographic, p. 137.
25
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
26
THE SONS OF CLOVIS
a considerable amount of booty, lack of supplies and disease
weakened the invaders and they retreated north into Gaul. The
lack of an organized system of supply defeated Theudebert's
army where the armies of the empire and the Ostrogoths could
not.21
The campaign of 554 differed in many ways from that of
539. Theudebald was a weak and sickly monarch, nothing like
his father. Where the latter himself had led the earlier Italian
invasion, Theudebald entrusted the campaign of 554 to a pair
of Alaman magnates, Buccelin and Leutharis, who Agathias
exaggeratedly states led a force of some 75,000 Franks and Ala-
mans into Italy. After taking Parma and Pavia, the invaders
moved toward Rome, where they divided into two groups. One,
under the command of Buccelin, bypassed Rome and went
south to Messina; the other force, under Leutharis, went
through Apulia and Calabria to Hydruntum. Both chiefs are
said to have collected a huge amount of booty, some of which
was sent back to Gaul. On the return to Gaul, Leutharis's troops,
forced to fight on foot, suffered severe setbacks from the Roman
garrison at Pisaurum and lost much booty. Continuing north,
Leutharis's forces camped at Ceneta where a plague broke out
killing many of the invaders, including their commander. Buc-
celin returned to the north by way of Campania. While camping
at Casilinum, he engaged in a battle against an imperial army
under Narses. Buccelin's forces, fighting on foot, were trapped
in a crossfire by Narses's mounted archers and were destroyed.22
In this campaign there was another noteworthy battle in
which Narses destroyed a small group of invaders. This band,
composed about equally of infantry and cavalry, deployed in a
phalanx in a forest and faced Narses's cavalry. Narses ordered a
charge, and his horsemen, after some contact, feigned a dis-
orderly retreat. The Merovingian troops broke ranks and pur-
21
Procopius, H.W., VI, xxv, 11; Gregory, Hist., Ill, 32. See Bernard S.
Bachrach, "Procopius, Agathias, and the Frankish Military," Speculum, XLV
(1970), 435-441, and the appendix below, pp. 131-138.
22
Agathias, Hist., I, 6; II, 2, 8, 9; Gregory, Hist., Ill, 32. J. B. Bury, His-
tory of the Later Roman Empire (New York, 1958), II, 277ff; Bachrach,
"Procopius, Agathias," pp. 435-441, and the appendix below, pp. 131-138.
27
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
sued them, but the Byzantines turned their horses and slaugh-
tered the scattered infantry, winning the day. The Merovingian
horsemen, however, fled to safety.23
Apart from these invasions of Italy, only two other campaigns
of this period — Chlotar's campaigns against the Saxons and
against his rebellious son, Chramn — are described in the sources
in sufficient detail to be useful. After Theudebald's death in
555, Chlotar had inherited his lands. While making a progress
through his newly acquired Austrasian kingdom in the follow-
ing year, Chlotar learned that the Saxons had rebelled again
and so he moved against them. When he approached their bor-
ders, the Saxons sent envoys seeking peace. Chlotar was willing
to reestablish peace, but the Austrasian Franks in his entourage
would not hear of it and attacked Chlotar. Gregory suggests
that they would perhaps even have killed him had he refused
to fight. The Franks' bellicosity, however, seems to have been
more manifest in counsel than on the battlefield, for when they
met the Saxons on the field they were decisively defeated.2*
Chlotar's most pressing problem, however, seems to have been
his son Chramn, who led a warband of mounted followers and
was served by two officers, Scapthar and Imnachar, whom Greg-
ory describes as the leaders of his bodyguard. Chramn made his
headquarters at Clermont, where he had driven out the Count
Firminus. He harassed the area by seizing women and terror-
izing Bishop Cautinus, who kept a saddled horse at his side to
escape being ridden down by Chramn's followers,28 Chramn's
activities led him to abandon Auvergne and to move to Poitiers,
where he made his new headquarters. Shortly thereafter, he
allied with his uncle Childebert with the aim of going against
his father in force. Chlotar finally acted and sent his sons Chari-
bert and Guntram against Chramn, who was at that time en-
camped at Black Mountain in the Limousin. Negotiations proved
futile and the opponents prepared for the battle with "magno
^Agathias, Hist., I, 21. Bernard S. Bachrach, "The Feigned Retreat at
Hastings," pp. 265-266.
* Gregory, Hist., IV, 14.
35
Ibid., IV, 13.
28
THE SONS OF CLOVIS
armorum apparatu," but when both forces were about to en-
gage, a storm broke with thunder and lightning and each side
returned to camp. Chramn then forged a message to his brothers
saying that their father had been killed in battle against the
Saxons. Charibert and Guntram mounted and left with all
speed, returning to Burgundy. Chramn followed with his force
and moved against Chalons-sur-Marne, which he took after a
siege. He continued on to Dijon, but did not enter, and then
proceeded to Paris where he met with Childebert.26
Chramn continued his operations against his father by moving
against the governor of Theiphalia, while Childebert seized
Rheims. Shortly thereafter, however, Childebert died and
Chramn, unable to come to terms with his father, fled to Brit-
tany where he found an ally in Count Chanao. Chlotar moved
his forces into Brittany and a battle was fought against Chramn
and the count. Chanao fled the field soon after the battle had
begun, and Chramn, as he retreated to the ships which he had
prepared for his escape in case of disaster, was captured and
killed.27
Chramn's activity in 556 illustrates not only the mobility of
his forces, but their ability to take a fortified position. This may
have been due to the military equipment which his troops, like
those of his brothers, carried with them. All three princes made
their home in, and presumably drew their forces from, the
more Romanized parts of Gaul — suggesting the influence of
imperial military traditions on Merovingian warfare.
Chramn's activities and those of the pretender, Munderic, are
described in considerable detail by Gregory, who in doing so
indicates the role which personal armed followings played in
the struggle for power. These personal armed followings differed
from each other just as did the men who led them. Chramn, a
prince of royal blood, controlled a comparatively large, well-
organized personal following, commanded by officers, mounted,
and armed with an abundance of sophisticated military equip-
ment. This force constituted nothing less than a private army.
86
Ibid., IV, 16,17.
"Ibid., TV, 18,20.
29
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
30
THE SONS OF CLOVIS
throne.29 The significance of the leudes has already been sug-
gested in the description of Clovis's victory over Ragnachar in
509. When Clovis went against Ragnachar, he bribed his enemy's
leudes and thus deprived him of his military followers.30 Theu-
debert, unlike Ragnachar, was able to gain the support of his
leudes, and thus prevailed against his uncles. Another example
of the significance of such followers to a ruler concerns Chlo-
tar's son Chilperic, who when his father died in 561, used a part
of the royal treasure which fell into his hands to ensure the sup-
port of those men whom he thought would be of value to his
cause. To strengthen his position still further, Chilperic per-
mitted his supporters (ftdeles) to plunder and seize estates with-
in his kingdom, thus buying their loyalty with wealth that was
not his to give.81 It is probable that the kind of men whose sup-
port ensured Theudebert's succession and whose loyalty Chil-
peric tried to purchase were of that group who controlled bands
of armed followers — men very much like Sigivald and Syagrius,
who when serving in the royal interest could help to keep a king
in power, but when alienated could weaken his position greatly.
Among the Austrasian Franks in particular, important men
of this type asserted their influence in military matters most
conspicuously. When Theuderic wanted to invade Thuringia in
531, he had to go to great lengths to convince these men and
their retainers to follow him. Ultimately they consented and
distinguished themselves in a cavalry charge on the Thuringian
plains. When, in the following year, Theuderic wanted to punish
the Arvernians for their revolt, these Franks with their armed
supporters threatened to desert him and to follow his brothers
29
Gregory, Hist., Ill, 23: "Cumque abissit, Theudoricus non post multos
dies obiit vicinsimo tertio regni sui anno. Consurgentes autem Childeber-
thus et Chlothacharius contra Theudobertum, regnum eius auferre voluerunt,
sed ille muneribus placatis a leodibus suis defensatus est et in regnum
stabilitus."
30
Ibid., II, 42.
21
Ibid., IV, 22: "Chilpericus vero post patris funera thesaurus, qui in
villa Brannacum erant congregati, accepit et ad Francos utiliores petiit
ipsusque muneribus mollitus sibi subdidit." VII, 7: "Guntchramnus vero rex
omnia quae fidelis regis Chilperici non recte diversis abstulerant.., restituit.
. . ." Bachrach, "Charles Martel," pp. 71-72.
31
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
who were planning an invasion of Burgundy, As has already
been mentioned, it was not until Theuderic promised them an
abundance of booty in gold, silver, slaves, and raiment, as well
as the right to keep everything they seized including the inhabi-
tants, that they followed him into Auvergne. The enormous pow-
er of the Austrasian magnates was also exemplified when Chlo-
tar's Prankish followers threatened to kill him if he accepted a
treaty with the Saxons who were harassing his border in 556.82
Yet another aspect of the personal armed following deserves
notice, that relating to the role of the king's guards. While on
campaign in Thuringia in 531, Chlotar's life was saved by the
armed men (armati) who surrounded his person. Certain guards
(pueri) who normally served Queen Clotild, Clovis's widow,
were assigned by her to protect her nephews, the sons of the
deceased Chlodomer. Arigisel may be considered part of Theu-
deric's guard.33 The identification of such guards with the an-
trustiones or members of the royal trust suggests a force of con-
siderable size and scope. Men of the royal trust not only served
at the king's side, but were also stationed in centenae estab-
lished throughout Gaul. These centenae were used by the Mero-
vingian kings for both colonizing and military purposes. Among
the inhabitants of the centenae were the antrustiones who prob-
ably performed military and paramilitary services required
of them under the command of the centencuius, a royal official
of imperial origin. Since the antrustiones were composed of
laeti and Romans as well as Franks and other barbarians, it is
likely that the military functions of these settlements had some
connection with the military colonies of laeti and other garri-
sons which had been established earlier by the empire.34
32
Gregory, Hist., IV, 14.
53
Ibid., Ill, 7, 18.
34
For a convincing definition of the centena see Wallace-Hadrill, Long-
Haired Kings, p. 193, n. 1, and cf. H. Dannenbauer, "Die Freien im karo-
lingische Heer," Aus Verfassungs- und Landesgeschichte: Festschrift fur T.
Mayer (Lindau, 1954), I, 49-64. MGH Cap., I, 3, 16: "Pro tenere pads
iubemus, ut in truste electi centenarii ponantur, per quorum fidem adque
sollicitudinem pax praedicta observetur. Et quia propiciante Domino inter
nos germanitatis caritas, indisruptum vinculum, custoditur, centenarii inter
communes provincias licentiani habeant latrones persequere vel vestigia
32
THE SONS OF CLOVIS
Any effort to estimate the size of the Merovingian military
organization founders upon the predilection of chroniclers for
exaggeration. In only one text — a copy of a letter from Theude-
bert to Justinian in which he apologizes for not having sent the
emperor the 3000 troops he had promised him during the pre-
ceding year — is a reliable figure probably given.35 This epistle
implies that Theudebert had at his disposal during the late
530s a force large enough so that he could spare 3000 men and
still maintain his own position. In any event, it seems unlikely
that Theudebert believed he could count on the followers of
the ill-disciplined Austrasian magnates whose caprice and greed
made them unreliable in the extreme. It might be suggested,
however, that Theudebert had considered sending a unit from
the Burgundian kingdom, which was reliable and well disci-
plined.38
This picture of the Merovingian military under Clevis's sons
is necessarily incomplete, since the answers to many questions
simply cannot be found. Nevertheless, it can be discerned that
the milites who garrisoned fortifications, the laeti who pro-
tected fortresses and served as antrustiones in centenae, the per-
sonal armed followings of the magnates, as well as other rem-
nants of the later Roman military establishment were militarily
significant.37 The Taifal laeti living in the area around Poitiers
may have been used as garrison troops, though the sources are
mute on the point; in any event, Theiphalia was organized un-
der a dux.SB This use of erstwhile imperial military formations
adsignata minare et in truste quod defecerit, sicut dictum est causa reman-
eat, ita ut continue capitale ei qui perdiderit reformare festinet, tamen
ut latronem perquirat. Quern si in truste pervenerit, medietatem sibi vin-
dicet, vel dilatura si fuerit, de facultate latronis ei qui damnum pertulit
sarciatur." See also Lex Sal., XLII, 1-4.
35
MGH, ep., Ill, 19. F. Lot, I/Art militaire et les armees au moyen Age
en Europe et dans le proche orient (Paris, 1946), I, 78-79, discusses this
letter in some detail.
88
Procopius, H.W., VI, xii, 38, suggests that Theudebert also agreed to
send aid to the Ostrogoths and in fact sent 10,000 Burgundians. Although
the number is most probably exaggerated, it can be assumed that Theude-
bert had it within his power to use Burgundian troops.
" Notifia Dignitatum, oc., LXII, 44.
33
Gregory, Hist., IV, 18, and ch. 1, n. 30, above.
33
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
34
THE SONS OF CLOVIS
imperial naval base during the fifth century.41 Whether Roman
or not, the fleet which served Theudebert in northern Gaul
and the ships prepared by Chramn were not of Prankish origin.
The Prankish role in Merovingian military organization
during the reign of Clovis's sons, although overestimated in
most scholarly accounts, should nevertheless not be underesti-
mated, even if by such underestimation a valuable corrective
to the popular view might be supplied. Prankish units seem
to have had an important function in Austrasia, the least Ro-
manized region of Gaul. Large numbers of Franks played a
significant part in the Italian campaign of 539, and Franks as
well as Alamans served in large numbers in the Italian venture
of 554. The descriptions of the Franks who participated in these
transalpine operations indicate that they were even less Roman-
ized than were the Franks of Austrasia. Many of the Franks
used in the Italian campaigns were probably recruited by the
Austrasian monarchs from beyond the Rhine. In doing this
Theudebert and Theudebald seem to have initiated a policy
which was developed during the next generation by Sigibert,
their successor in Austrasia.42
The diverse development of the Merovingian military organi-
zation, which had been manifest under Clovis, continued along
the same lines under his sons. The heterogeneous ethnic compo-
sition of the military forces, including Franks, Alamans, Gallo-
Romans, descendants of imperial military personnel, Alans,
Saxons, and Taifals, was expanded by Clovis's sons with the
inclusion of the Burgundians and their military establishment.
The complexity of this organization as it passed into the hands
of Clovis's grandsons defies simple characterization, although its
Roman elements are worth emphasizing in light of previous
scholarly neglect.
a
Notttia Dignitatum, oc., XXXVIII, 8: "Praefectus classis Sambricae, in
loco Quartensi sivi Hornensi." Grenier, Manuel d'archSologie, V, 390ff.
"Gregory, Hist., IV, 49, 50. Cf. A. Cameron, "Agathias on the Early
Merovingians," Annali detta Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, XXXVII
(1968), 129ff, 136-140. Appendix, n. 7, for the trans-Rhenish origin and
the primitive nature of the Merovingian armies in the Italian campaigns.
35
CHAPTER III
Clovis's Grandsons:
561-593
W HEN Chlotar died in 561, Merovingian military activity
continued under the leadership of his sons Chilperic, Sigi-
bert, Guntram, and Charibert, each of whom received a share
of Chlotar's kingdom. Although the period of their reigns was
plagued by internal fighting, the military organization begun
by Clovis increased in power and complexity with the intro-
duction of a new fighting force — the local levy.
561-575
The year after Chlotar's death, when Sigibert was called upon
to defend his eastern border against the Avars, Chilperic in-
vaded the western part of his kingdom, taking possession of
Rheims, Soissons, and several other cities which Gregory does
not name. Upon successfully driving out the Avars, Sigibert
moved west and retook these cities; at Soissons he captured
Chilperic's son Theudebert, who had been left there to com-
mand a garrison. This incident touched off the first spark that
eventually flared up into the bella dvilia which were to char-
acterize the reigns of Clevis's grandsons.1
Approximately four years after Sigibert defeated the Avars,
these barbarians once again attacked the Merovingian kingdom.
Sigibert went to meet them in battle, but in this encounter he
1
Gregory, Hist., TV, 23. Wallace-Hadrill, Long-Haired Kings, p. 195.
36
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
37
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
38
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
39
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
40
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
41
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
42
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
43
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
44
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
ing this period: one led by himself, another by his son Chlodo-
vech, and a third by his son Theudebert. None of them seems to
have been very large or very effective. Mummolus, Guntram's
patrician, had little trouble defeating Theudebert's force, and
Sigibert captured Theudebert when he was commanding a garri-
son at Soissons. Theudebert finally met his death at the hands of
the local levies of Tours and Chateaudun. Sigibert's horde from
beyond the Rhine did not find it difficult to discourage Chilperic
from fighting, and Chlodovech was driven from Bordeaux by
what may have been a garrison force led by Sigulf. Chilperic's
Franks at Rouen in the western part of Gaul may perhaps have
been a garrison or centena for that area. Unfortunately little can
be ascertained with certainty about the composition of Chil-
peric's forces. They do not seem to have been local levies, but
rather personal followings, such as that which Godinus probably
had and the one which protected Queen Fredegund, known as
pueri reginae.17
The reigns of the three Merovingian monarchs, Sigibert, Chil-
peric, and Guntram, from 561 to 575 amply demonstrate the
importance of diverse military institutions to a ruler's success.
Sigibert's Austrasian Franks were of little military value and he
had to rely upon undisciplined hordes from beyond the Rhine.
His local levies, however, in the old Gallo-Roman cities were
effective. Chilperic, using private warbands, could gain brief
successes but was not able to sustain his efforts against Sigi-
bert's trans-Rhenish warriors or Guntram's disciplined Burgun-
dian forces of Roman origin. The armies of the Burgundian king-
dom, which owed much to imperial institutions, were the most
successful during this period.
575-584
After the death of Sigibert at the hands of Queen Fredegund's
armed retainers, Chilperic seems to have dominated military
Avennici territorii, quam Mummolus munere meruerat regio. . . ." See
Bachrach, "Charles Martel," pp. 71-72.
17
For the pueri reginae see Gregory, Hist., VI, 32. On the centena of
Rouen see Musset, Les invasiones, p. 187.
45
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
46
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
47
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
48
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
49
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
within the Merovingian kingdoms. Leudast became count of
Tours during the reign of Charibert. When that king died and
the city was supposed to pass under Sigibert's control, Leudast
gave his support to Chilperic but lost his position as count. After
gaining control of Tours, Chilperic restored the countship to
Leudast, who, in this position, spent much of his time and effort
in plundering and abusing the people whom he was charged to
protect. Among those he maltreated were soldiers (milites) sta-
tioned in the city, perhaps because they owed their loyalty
directly to the king.30
Leudast's activities eventually incurred the wrath of both Chil-
peric and Fredegund. When they deprived him of his courtship
and determined to eliminate him, Leudast fled to Paris but con-
tinued to plot, causing suspicion to be thrown upon Bishop
Gregory. Duke Berulf, who governed the territory of Tours and
Poitiers, and Eunomius, the new count of Tours, posted guards
(custodes) at the city gates, allegedly to watch Gregory. Mean-
while, Chilperic ordered that no one might receive Leudast into
his house. Leudast returned to Tours, gathered up much of his
treasure, and proceeded to Bourges, the possession of King Gunt-
ram. Chilperic's pueri pursued Leudast, but still he managed to
avoid capture. At Bourges the count and a band of his armed
followers robbed Leudast who barely escaped with his life. Leu-
dast then rallied his followers, some of whom were from Tours,
returned to Bourges, and retook part of his treasure. Berulf had
learned of Leudast's activity and sent some of his own pueri to
seize him. Leudast again escaped, this time to Poitiers where he
took refuge at the Church of St. Hilary. From his sanctuary at
St. Hilary, Leudast led his followers in plundering the people
and property nearby. For these depredations he was expelled
from the church. Shortly thereafter he went to Chilperic, who
was camped with an army at Melun, to seek his pardon; then
he traveled with the king to Paris to seek a pardon from the
queen as well. She refused and sent her pueri to seize him.
30
Ibid., 47, 48: ". . . milites fustibus verberari. ..."
50
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
Armed with swords and shields, they wounded and captured
Leudast, who was first tortured and then executed.81
Among the armed forces which were operating during the
episode described above was a band of pueri regis who pursued
Leudast from Tours to Bourges, while the king himself was some
two hundred miles to the north at Bernay. This force may be
compared to one which Chilperic sent to Limoges a short time
later. In March of 579, the people of Limoges attacked Chil-
peric's tax collectors who had to flee to save their lives. Chilperic,
upon learning of this, sent a band of men from his side (de
latero suo) to punish the inhabitants of Limoges. These men
inflicted heavy losses on the people, killing many and exacting
severe reprisals. These pueri regis further illustrate the diversity
of Chilperic's forces as do the milites, stationed at Tours, who
seem to have been responsible to an authority other than that
of the count. This is suggested by Leudast's hostility toward
them and by texts which indicate that milites served under a
tnbunus. A certain Medard served as tnbunus at Tours at about
that time. Also at Tours were men identified as custodes, who
are apparently described by their function, although this may
have been their title as well. It is reasonable to suggest that the
custodes formed some kind of force other than a local levy, for
Gregory speaks specifically of the local levy of Tours, but fails
to indicate in any way that the custodes may have served in this
same capacity. Gregory does mention that Chilperic used men
called custodes to guard strategic positions such as the bridge
across the Orge south of Paris. That local levies were not the
only troops in some cities is illustrated by the milites at Tours
and the distinction drawn by Gregory between these levies and
the garrison at Poitiers.82
Like the magnates under previous Merovingian kings, many
of Chilperic's important supporters—Duke Berulf and Duke
81
Ibid., V, 49; VI, 32.
^Ibid., V, 28: "Unde rmiltum molestus rex, dirigens de latere suo per-
sonas, imnensis damnis populum adflixit suppliciisque conteruit, morte
multavit." On the tribunus see Gregory, Hist., VII, 23, and ch. IV, pp. 78-
80. Gregory, Hist., VI, 19, for custodes; for the levy of Tours, IV, 50; V, 26;
VI, 12, 31; arid for the local levy and garrison at Poitiers, IV, 47; V, 24.
51
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
52
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
Waroch swore fealty to Chilperic and gave him his son as a
hostage.34
Chilperic's continued efforts to conquer western Gaul led him,
in 581, to order Duke Desiderius to go against Guntram's cities
in the southwest. Desiderius defeated Guntram's Duke Ragno-
vald and seized control of Agen, Perigueux, and Angouleme.
While Desiderius was in the field against Guntram's forces, Chil-
peric's Duke Bladast attacked the Gascons, but was decisively
defeated. Guntram planned to retaliate by sending the levy of
Bourges against Tours, but Duke Berulf called out the local
levy of Tours for defense of the city, and Guntram's forces made
no permanent gains.35 Two years after this successful defense of
Tours, Chilperic again employed the levies in a two-pronged
attack against Bourges, Guntram's stronghold in western Gaul.
Duke Berulf, with the levies of Tours, Poitiers, Angers, and
Nantes, attacked from the north, while Desiderius and Bladast
with the forces from Chilperic's territory in southern Gaul at-
tacked from the south. This army probably included the troops
Desiderius had commanded when he conquered Guntram's
cities two years earlier, the force Bladast had led against the
Gascons, and perhaps the local levies of the cities of Agen, Peri-
gueux, Saintes, Bordeaux, Toulouse, and Angouleme, which were
all at that time under Chilperic's control. A bloody battle ensued
between the local levy of Bourges and the force led by Desiderius
and Bladast. Chilperic's army compelled the local forces to
retreat and they took refuge in Bourges which Chilperic's dukes
then put under siege.36
Meanwhile, Chilperic attacked and burned Guntram's strong-
hold at Melun. But Guntram, leading a force against his brother,
defeated him decisively. Chilperic had to retreat to Paris and
84
Ibid., V, 26: "Dehinc Toronici, Pictavi, Baiocassini, Caenomannici et
Andecavi cum aliis multis in Brittania ex iussu Chilperici regis abierunt et
contra Varocum . . . resedent. Sed ille dolose per nocte super Saxones Baio-
cassinos ruens, maximam exinde partem interfecit." Note Gregory's dis-
tinction between the men of Bayeux and the Saxons of Bayeux. For other
references to these Saxons see X, 9, and Longnon, Geographie, pp. 172—175.
85
Gregory, Hist., VI, 12. Longnon, Geographie, pp. 145ff.
88
Gregory, Hist., VI, 31; IX, 31.
53
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
54
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
available. Thus when Guntram Boso and his men were in mid-
stream, their boats began to fall apart and sink and many fighting
men were lost in the river. This was not the only stratagem that
Mummolus used to prepare for Guntram Boso's attack, for he
also dug a moat on the eastern side of Avignon into which he
directed water from the Rhone. To make the moat an even more
formidable obstacle, deep pits were dug at random so that al-
though at certain places an attacker might be able to wade, with
his next step he might sink over his head. These tactics did not
prevent Avignon from being besieged, although Guntram Boso
nearly drowned in the treacherous pits in the moat and the life
of a follower (amicus) of his was lost when his attempts to
escape from a pit were foiled by his heavy armor. When Childe-
bert II learned that two of his supporters, Guntram Boso and
Mummulos, were thus engaged, he ordered Duke Gundulf to
bring peace among the king's followers at Avignon, which he
succeeded in doing.39
Although Childebert successfully prevented this incident from
becoming a full-scale war, his youthfulness caused difficulties, as
did the machinations of the magnates. Not only did many of
them connive to bring Gundovald into Gaul, but some worked
secretly for King Chilperic. Others overtly sought aggrandize-
ment at their king's expense. Two such magnates, Ursio and
Berthefred, with their followers, plundered the lands of Duke
Lupus of Champagne, a loyal supporter of the king, and drove
him out of his duchy despite the support he received from the
royal house.40
Nonetheless, Childebert did enjoy a strong measure of sup-
port on at least one occasion from the rank and file (minor
populus) of his forces. This occurred when Bishop Egidius of
Rheims and some of Childebert's other magnates arranged a
treaty with Chilperic and prevailed upon the youth to march in
his uncle's support. The minor populus refused, however, say-
ing that the king's magnates, who allowed his cities to be taken
over and his people to be subjugated, were selling him out to
89
Ibid., VI, 1, 24, 26.
40
Ibid., X, 19; VI, 4.
55
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
584-593
When the news of Chilperic's murder spread across the land, the
magnates and monarchs began vying for power and support,
resulting in conflicts that resembled the chaos following the
death of Sigibert a decade earlier. Although a number of Chil-
°- Ibid., VI, 31, 42.
56
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
peric's adherents remained loyal to Queen Fredegund, and his
son Chlotar II was even crowned king of Neustria, other sup-
porters of Chilperic declared their allegiance to either Childebert
II or the pretender Gundovald. The major conflict which flared
up after Chilperic's death was not, however, a struggle for per-
sonal supporters, but a struggle for the deceased ruler's cities.
Soon after his death, Childebert's Duke Gararic seized Limoges
and Poitiers, the local levies of Blois and Orleans attacked Cha-
teaudun, the men of Bourges subjected Tours to King Guntram's
rule, and then together the levies of Bourges and Tours took
Poitiers for Guntram. In this struggle for power and this vying for
position, magnates led their armed bands in all kinds of activities:
for example, Avius, who had been raiding and plundering in the
area around Poitiers with his followers, was killed by Childeric
the Saxon who at that time was leading his own armed retainers
(pueri)*2
Childebert and Guntram were not the only ones who hoped to
gain by Chilperic's death, for Dukes Desiderius and Bladast
joined Gundovald's cause. Desiderius, upon learning of his king's
death, led a band of picked men into Toulouse and seized the
treasure that Princess Rigunth had been taking to Spain. He
placed the treasure under guard in Toulouse and sped to Avig-
non where he met Gundovald and Mummolus. In November of
584 Desiderius, Gundovald, Mummolus, and their retainers
quickly moved to Brives-la-Gaillarde near Limoges, where Gun-
dovald was raised to the kingship. Their plans to go north and
occupy Poitiers were thwarted, however, by the levies of Orleans
and Bourges which had retaken the city after the Poitivins re-
turned to Childebert's side following their submission to the men
of Bourges and Tours. Therefore Gundovald went south, receiv-
ing the submission of Angouleme, Perigueux, and Toulouse, and
proceeded to Bordeaux. In January or early February of 585,
*2 For Chilperic's supporters defecting to Childebert see Gregory, Hist.,
VII, 4; for Gundovald's supporters, VII, 9, 10, 27; for Duke Gararic, VII,
13; for the levies of Blois, Orleans, Chateaudun, and Chartres, VII, 2; for
Bourges, VII, 12; for those of Chilperic's followers who remained loyal to
his son, VII, 7; and VII, 3: " . . . unus ex pueris Childerici Avonem hasta
transfixit."
57
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
58
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
speed, presumably to keep Gundovald from provisioning the
fortress for a long siege. Fortunately for Gundovald, Leudegisel's
cavalry stopped to plunder the Church of St. Vincent near Agen
and did not carry out its mission.45
By the end of February or early March, all of Leudegisel's
forces were finally encamped around Convenae with their tents
pitched, their foragers in the field, and access to and from the
fortress blocked. After some two weeks, Leudegisel found it
necessary to prepare new siege engines; battering rams were
mounted on wagons covered with sheds to protect the attackers
from missiles hurled from the walls of the fortress. Leudegisel's
troops also tried to fill up the moat on the eastern side of the
fortress, but their efforts were to no avail. Each attempt to storm
or breach the walls was met successfully by the defenders, who
hurled down loads of stones and cauldrons of burning oil and
pitch from the walls.46
Though Leudegisel's elaborate siege operations were unsuccess-
ful, Convenae nevertheless fell to the attackers. When Mummolus
and Gundovald's other supporters learned that help would not
be forthcoming from the magnates of Childebert's kingdom, they
concluded that their position was hopeless and in return for a
promise of pardon from Leudegisel they pressured Gundovald
into surrendering. The pretender, knowing he had been betrayed,
had no choice but to surrender since the magnates' followers
were the only troops he had. Perhaps if Gundovald had not
tricked the resident fighting men of Convenae into leaving the
fortress, he would have had a force capable of counteracting that
of Leudegisel. At any rate, more was lost than the fortress, for
despite assurances to the contrary, Gundovald, Mummolus, and
45
Ibid., VII, 35.
M
Ibid., VII, 35, 37: "Quintus et decimus in hac obsidione effulserat dies,
et Leudeghiselus novas ad distruendam urbem machinas praeparabat. Plaus-
tra enim cum arietibus, cletellis et axebus tecta, sub quae exercitus pro-
peraret ad distruendos muros. Sed cum adpropinquassent, ita lapidibus
obruebantur, ut omnes adpropinquantes muro conruerint. Cupas cum pice
et adipe accensas super eos proicientes, alias vero lapidibus plenas super
eos deiciebant. Sed cum nox certamina prohiberit, hostes ad castra regressi
sunt."
59
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
60
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
linzona, he was killed and many of his men were cut down
while foraging. In northwestern Italy Cedinus, with thirteen
dukes, took at least five Lombard fortresses. In general, however,
Childebert's troops were unable to coax a Lombard army into
meeting them on the field, and the Merovingian forces were un-
able to subjugate any of the larger Lombard cities, such as Pavia.
After ravaging northern Italy for some three months and being
wracked by fever and disease, Childebert's army retreated into
Gaul. Many of the soldiers were so poorly off that they had to
sell their arms and other possessions in order to obtain food.48
In the spring of 585, immediately following the Gundovald
affair, Guntram ordered the fighting forces of his entire kingdom
against the Goths in Septimania. Men from north of the Saone,
west of the Rhone, and north of the Seine, along with men of
the old Burgundian kingdom, advanced on Nimes, plundering
all along the way, even in Guntram's own territory. The local
levies of Bourges, Saintes, Perigueux, and Angouleme, Childe-
bert's levy of Auvergne, and people from other cities in Gun-
tram's kingdom moved on Carcassonne, also plundering as they
traveled. Neither of these forces was able to take those Gothic
cities which closed their gates. No effort was made to mount a
siege; only the surrounding areas and the cities whose citizens
were foolish enough to open then: gates were plundered. By the
end of July it became clear that this army was not going to sub-
jugate Septimania; not only were Guntram's troops finding it
difficult to forage, but the hostile populace was continually
harassing them. By the middle of August when the campaign
was over, many of the participants — Gregory says 5000 — had
died of hunger or had been killed by the people in the areas
they traversed.49
The failure of Guntram's forces in Septimania seems to have
encouraged Reccared, the Visigoth king, to attack the Merovingi-
an frontier. He plundered the area around Toulouse and raided
up to the Rhone; he captured the garrisons of the fortress at
48
Ibid., VI, 42; VIII, 18, and Paul, Hist., Ill, 29. Also Gregory, Hist., X,
3: 49"Audovaldus vero dux cum Vinthrione, commoto Campaniae populo. . . ."
Gregory, Hist., VIII, 30.
61
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
Cabaret and Beaucaire, plundered within the walls, and then left
them deserted. After accomplishing this, he shut himself up
within the fortress of Nimes. Learning of Reccared's raid, Gun-
tram appointed Leudegisel as patrician in place of Aegilan. Leu-
degisel then proceeded with troops to regarrison the fortresses
devastated by Reccared, while Duke Nicetius of Auvergne led a
force to patrol the frontier.50
It is worth noting that even before the Burgundian kingdom
had fallen under Merovingian rule, garrisoned fortresses played
an important role in the defense of the area. Using erstwhile Ro-
man fortifications and garrisons often descended from laeti and
milites, the Burgundian monarchs and their Frankish successors
provided for the protection of the frontiers, the imprisonment of
enemy captives, and perhaps the bases for standing military
forces. The fortresses attacked by Reccared and regarrisoned by
Leudegisel were part of Guntram's frontier defenses, which
probably included the fortified cities of Orange and Lodeve be-
fore the latter fell into Gothic hands. The men called to regar-
rison the forts at Cabaret and Beaucaire served under the patri-
cian and may perhaps have been detached from the Burgundian
standing army. The men whom Duke Nicetius led to patrol the
border of Childebert's kingdom were not of the levy of Au-
vergne, but custodes of some kind and perhaps a permanent
military body.51
In 587 Duke Desiderius, who had become a supporter of King
Guntram after Gundovald's death, and Count Austrovald of Tou-
louse, who served as his second in command, led the local levy
of Toulouse against Carcassonne. The Gothic garrison at Carcas-
sonne learned of the impending attack, however, and went out
to meet Desiderius's force, but when the battle began the Goths
turned and fled. Desiderius attacked their rear guard and pur-
50
Ibid., VIII, 30; IX, 7: "Unum etiam castro Ugernum nomen cum rebus
atque habitatoribus desolantes, nullo resistenti, regressi sunt." This last at-
tack was in 587, indicating that Beaucaire was regarrisoned by that time.
For the Visigothic side of this campaign see Thompson, The Goths in Spain,
pp. 92-94.
51
V. Epiphanii, 171; Procopius, H.W., V, xii, 29; xiii, 3; Gregory, Hist.,
IV, 42. Also Longnon, Geographic, pp. 441, 613, and Thompson, The Goths
in Spain, pp. 92-94.
62
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
sued it hotly, but when he reached the walls of the city only a
few of his men were still with him; the others had been unable
to keep up because their horses were exhausted. Seeing Desideri-
us's precarious position, the men of the city rushed out and
killed the duke and most of those with him.52
Austrovald, who replaced Desiderius as duke in the area of
Toulouse, later subjected Carcassonne to Guntram's control, but
Guntram's desire to gain control of the Gothic-held cities in Sep-
timania did not end with this victory. In 589, four years after his
first futile attempt to subjugate Septimania, he again sent an
army into the area, this time made up of the local levies of Peri-
gueux, Bordeaux, Agen, and Toulouse. Duke Boso commanded
the force, with a certain Antestius as second in command. Clau-
dius, the Gothic leader in Septimania, prepared an ambush for
Boso's levies. He sent a small force against the invaders' camp
and kept the remainder of his men hidden some distance away.
The small attacking force was easily repelled and as it retreated,
Boso's men pursued it. Soon they found themselves between the
two Gothic forces and the ensuing attack almost wiped them out.
Boso's camp was taken and only those who were able to reach
their mounts escaped; those less fortunate were either killed or
captured.53
Guntram's efforts to gain control of Septimania were curtailed
by these failures and also by his need to defend other parts of his
kingdom against the Bretons who had been raiding in the west.
In response to these raids, Guntram sent a force under Dukes
Beppolen and Ebrachar. On this campaign Beppolen was to fall
victim to Ebrachar's plotting and to Queen Fredegund's animosity.
The queen ordered her Saxons from Bayeux to cut their hair in
the Breton style and to join them as allies. While Beppolen was
fighting against both the Bretons and the Saxons, Ebrachar re-
treated with the larger part of the force, leaving his colleague at
the mercy of the enemy who murdered him and his personal
followers in the swamps. Learning that Beppolen was dead, Eb-
53
Gregory, Hist., VIII, 45.
^Ibid,, IX, 31; John Biclar, Chron., 589; Fred., IV, 10. Bachrach,
"Feigned Retreat," p. 266.
63
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
rachar returned and made peace with the Breton leader. But to
return to their own territory Ebrachar's forces had to cross the
Vilaine River. The mounted troops were able to swim their
horses across the river, but the less important fighting men (in-
feriores and pauperes), who were on foot, were not as success-
ful. Some tried to swim across on the backs of horses (cabcdU)
from the baggage train, but most of the untrained mounts and
their equally unskilled riders were drowned. Those who were
not drowned but remained on the west bank of the river were
either killed or captured by the Bretons who thus broke the
peace.54
Aside from these major military campaigns during the last
decade of Guntram's life, there were many relatively minor en-
counters involving smaller groups. Guntram himself, according
to Gregory of Tours, never went anywhere, even to church,
without a large following of armed men. He also sent men from
the court to carry out paramilitary missions, one of which was
the killing of a certain Boantus by a detachment of pueri be-
cause he had been unfaithful to Guntram. Two of the more im-
portant men who served the king in this capacity were Antestius
and Claudius; neither seems to have had an official title, but
both led missions of a military nature from the court. As has al-
ready been mentioned, Antestius acted as second in command
to Duke Boso in the campaign of 589; he also served Guntram
by punishing troublemakers of Angers and Nantes. Claudius,
too, took part in such activities; his service cost him his life. He
was sent with his own pueri to capture Eberulf, one of Chil-
peric's high officials accused of his murder. Claudius and his
pueri fought it out with Eberulf and his followers, resulting in the
death of both leaders and some of the pueri.55
Many of these paramilitary activities were directed against
Childebert, who not only had to deal with such minor harass-
ments but was faced with a more serious conspiracy. For in the
autumn of 587 three of his magnates — Berthefred and the Dukes
54
Gregory, Hist., X, 9.
66
Ibid., VII, 8, 18; IX, 3, for Guntram's personal guards; VIII, 11, for
Boantus; VIII, 43; IX, 31, for Antestius; and VII, 29, for Claudius.
64
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
Rauching and Ursio — plotted to kill the king and then rule the
kingdom in the names of his sons. Childebert learned of the
plot, however, and invited Rauching to the court where the
king had the duke murdered. At the same time, Childebert sent
some of his pueri from the court to seize Rauching's extensive
estates. When the pueri who had accompanied Rauching to the
court learned of their lord's death, one of them rode off with
word of the disaster to his widow who received the news as she
was parading through the streets of Soissons with a following of
her own armed guards.56 While Rauching went to see Childe-
bert, Ursio and Berthefred prepared their forces. When they
learned of Rauching's death, they took refuge with their follow-
ers and families at a Roman fortification which had been con-
verted into a church. In December of 587 Childebert sent a
force against them. Godegisel, Childebert's commander on this
occasion, laid siege to the fortified place and then tried to burn
out the conspirators. Ursio sallied forth with his followers and
cut down many of the besiegers before he himself was killed.
Berthefred escaped on horseback with some of his armed re-
tainers, but they were eventually caught and slain.57
66
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
than on the more limited scope of the other local levies.59 In
neither Austrasia nor the lands which before 534 formed the
Burgundian kingdom do locally organized levies seem to have
been developed during this period. Gregory makes no mention
of forces at Cologne, Zulpich, Metz, Mainz, Verdun, Strasbourg,
Worms, Spire, Toul, or Maastricht in a manner which might be
interpreted as a force organized on a local basis. Neither does
Gregory mention levies at Lyons, Nevers, Autun, Chalons,
Geneva, Grenoble, or Valence. It is true that Gregory lived at
Tours and perhaps showed a greater interest in the western and
more Roman parts of Gaul than in Austrasia and Burgundy. Yet
Lyons and Vienne are closer to Tours than either Toulouse or
Bordeaux, both of which Gregory indicates as having a local
levy; and it would be difficult to argue that the latter were more
Romanized than the former. In addition, it must be noted that
among the dozens of military encounters which Gregory de-
scribes many involved forces from Austrasia and the erstwhile
Burgundian kingdom.
The levy of a city was usually commanded by the count of the
tivitas, although in several instances a group of cities, with their
counts, was brought together under the overall administrative
and military control of a duke. For example, Duke Ennodius
was responsible for Tours, Poitiers, Aire, and Lescar; Duke Berulf
was his predecessor in Tours and Poitiers; Nicetius was the duke
of Clermont, Rodez, and Uzes; Duke Beppolen administered the
cities of western Gaul belonging to Chlotar II, but controlled
by King Guntram. To these commands might be added the re-
gional levy of Champagne which was led by the duke. These
dukes who served as the administrative and military heads of
several cities should be differentiated from those dukes who
held ad hoc command of one or more local levies for a single
campaign. For example, Duke Guntram Boso took command of
the levies of Auvergne and Velay in 582 in an attempt to rout
Mummolus who was ensconced at Avignon, and Duke Boso (not
69
Ibid., V, 3: ". . . collecti aliqui de Campania. . . ." X, 3: "Audovaldus
vero dux cum Vinthrione commoto Campaniae populo. . . ." X, 27: "Com-
motns autem pro hac causa Campanensis populus. . . ."
67
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
to be confused with the former) commanded the levies of P&i-
gueux, Bordeaux, Agen, and Toulouse in 589 for an invasion of
Septimania.60
During the latter part of the sixth century, these locally or-
ganized levies, as well as the provincial levy of Champagne,
were used in both offensive and defensive actions. As defensive
measures they protected their area from invasion and performed
police duties of a substantial nature. Offensively, levies went
against the Goths in Septimania, the pretender Gundovald, and
the Bretons. None of the city levies were used outside of Gaul,
however; they did not go south of the Alps, south of the Pyr-
enees, or east of the Rhine. In fact, ventures of more than 300
miles from their home base seem to have been beyond their com-
petence, although they did remain away for more than three
months at a time during all seasons.81
The personnel composition of these levies is difficult to ascer-
tain. Neither all men, nor even all freemen, were required to
serve. For example, on occasion a son might ask and receive per-
mission to serve in place of his father, who would owe service,
whereas the son, who was in some cases more fit to serve, did
not.62 The selective nature of the local levy is further emphasized
by an episode which took place in Guntram's army when it went
against the pretender Gundovald during the autumn of 584. In
addition to the levy of Tours, a large number of other inhabi-
tants of the city (whom Gregory clearly distinguishes from the
levy) followed along in the hope of obtaining booty.63
"'Ibid., VI, 18, 21, 26, 31, 42; IX, 31.
81
The levy of Poitiers which traveled south to fight at Convenae in 585
seems to have gone further from its home base than any of the other local
levies. The provincial levy of Champagne went beyond the borders of Gaul
and fought in Italy (Gregory, Hist., X, 3).
88
Form. Andec., 37 (MGH Form. Merov. et Karol.): "Dum in omnibus
et per omnia et super totum nobis fidiliter servire videras, multa penurias et
iniurias per deversa loca pro nostra necessitate successisti, et in utilitate
domnorum partibus Brittanici seu Wasconici austiliter ordine ad specie mea
fuisti, proinde convenit nobis, ut aliquid de facultatis nostra te emeliorare
deberent; quod ita et fecerunt." See the discussion of this by Boutaric,
Institutions militaires de la France, p. 59, and N. D. Fustel de Coulanges,
Histoire des institutions politiques de I'ancienne France (Paris, 1888), IV,
293, n. 2.
83
Gregory, Hist., VII, 28: "Post haec [autem] exercirus ab urbe Pectava
68
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
Any suggestion that service in the levies was universal is cast
in doubt by the eloquent silence of the Prankish law codes on
this point. These codes were drawn up and revised throughout
the sixth century and do not mention an obligation for all to
serve. At one time in the sixth century, however, both poor men
and economic dependents seem to have been included among
those who owed service in the local levies. But by the last
quarter of that century it was customary, at least in northwestern
Gaul, for the poor to be exempt from such service. Some eco-
nomic dependents (particularly those of the Church of St. Mar-
tin) were exempt as well.64 These exemptions were granted not
out of benevolence, however, but rather because of the economic
repercussions that would have resulted from the use of such
people in the local levies. For economic dependents, burdened
with labor services which they owed to their lords as well as
with the upkeep of their own holdings, could hardly perform in
even the most limited offensive campaigns (a week or two)
without causing economic dislocations more damaging than their
absence from military campaigning. Fields left unplanted or
crops left to rot unharvested could not possibly have been per-
mitted as an institutionalized consequence of the mode of mili-
tary organization which flourished in Neustria and Aquitaine for
a generation and more. In short, the demands of the division of
labor caused certain limitations in the recruitment of men for the
local levies. Whereas the requirements of economic dependence
limited mobility and thus service, poverty had similar effects.
The men who served in these local levies seem to have had to
rely upon their own resources to provide the food and materiel
necessary for their service. The inability of the poor to provide
their own weapons and sustenance for several months of cam-
paigning may well have been the reason for their eventual ex-
clusion from the local levies.
remotus inantea post Gundovaldum profiscitur. Secutique sunt eum de Toro-
nici multi lucri causa; sed Pectavis super se inruentibus, nonnulli interempti,
plurimi vero spoliati redierunt. Hi autem qui de his ad exercitu prius
iuncxerant pariter abierunt."
64
Ibid., V, 26: "Post haec Chilpericus rex de pauperibus et iunioribus
eclesiae vel basilicae bannos iussit exigi, pro eo quod in exercitu non
69
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
70
CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
71
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
organized in special groups of some kind or they may have been
drawn from one of the other standing forces. The contexts in
which they are mentioned make it clear that they are not local
levies. Most of these standing forces seem to be overwhelmingly
imperial in origin — the laeti were Roman military colonists, the
milites were descendants of Roman soldiers, the centena was
commanded by a centenarius who held a Roman title. The cen-
tena was placed on lands of the royal fisc which was often the
former imperial fisc. The antrustiones who served on the cen-
tenae were drawn not only from among the Franks, but from
among the Romans and laeti as well. Those who served in gar-
risons performed their duties in fortified places built by the
empire.
Along with these local and general levies, the Merovingian
monarch had at his disposal a personal armed following which
served him at the court. These fighting men were employed to
quell minor uprisings, deal with unfaithful magnates, and of
course to protect the king. Most often the rank and file of these
groups are called pueri, which seems to indicate low estate. Pueri,
nevertheless, were members of the royal trust and served as
antrustiones.
As has already been mentioned in chapters I and II, the per-
sonal armed followings of the magnates also played an important
role in the complex Merovingian military. The shifting loyalty of
these powerful men could result in critical situations such as the
Gundovald affair, Rauching's conspiracy, and Merovech's ven-
ture. In recognition of the problem caused by the shifting loyalty
of these magnates, whom Gregory sometimes calls leudes, Gun-
tram and Childebert II agreed not to "invite" each other's leudes
to join them and not to accept those who volunteered to switch
sides.68 The example of Godinus, whose defection from Sigibert
to Chilperic in exchange for lands from the Neustrian fisc caused
a war between the two monarchs, is worth recalling in this
context.
68
Ibid., IX, 20, for the Pact of Andelot: "Similiter convenit, ut nullus
alterius leudis nee sollicitet nee venientes expipiat."
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CLOVIS'S GRANDSONS
On the whole, the Merovingian military in the era of Clevis's
grandsons is a confusing mosaic of heterogeneous elements. The
legacy of imperial institutions — milites, laeti, allies, and gar-
risoned Roman fortifications — coexists with pagan hordes from
beyond the Rhine, centenae of antrustiones recruited among Ro-
mans and barbarians, local levies from the cities of the Roman-
ized parts of Gaul, the personal followings of the magnates, and
the pueri regis. When a monarch was able and fortunate, these
various groups tended to serve him with a significant measure
of loyalty, but during minorities, regencies, and interregna, or
other times of great stress and upheaval, many of these groups
served nonroyal interests. The monarchs' struggle to maintain
royal power cannot be separated from their efforts to control
these many elements of the Merovingian military. Such efforts
were constant and costly and the loyalty of the magnates, which
was perhaps most important, was often for sale to the highest
bidder.
73
CHAPTER IV
74
THE LAST OF THE RULING MEROVINGIANS
75
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
However, Theuderic and Theudebert had extensive military
resources to draw on, and when fully exploited, these would
place the less fortunate Chlotar at the brothers' mercy. Not only
were the combined kingdoms of Theudebert and Theuderic
more than three times larger than Chlotar's holdings, but the lat-
ter had only one local levy at his command — that of Bayeux.
Theuderic could call on the levies of Toulouse, Agen, Nantes,
Angers, Saintes, Angouleme, Perigueux, Orleans, Blois, Chartres,
and Le Mans, as well as the standing army of Burgundy. Theude-
bert controlled the territorial levy of Champagne and the local
levies of the Auvergne, Poitiers, Tours, Vellay, Bordeaux, and
Chateaudun; he also had access to the general levy of Austrasia,
pagan Germans from beyond the Rhine, and Alamans from the
Transjura area.5
Despite this significant military advantage, it took the brothers
more than four years to mobilize their superior forces and defeat
Chlotar. In 600 Theuderic and Theudebert invaded Chlotar's
kingdom and massacred his men on the banks of the Orvanne
near Dormelles. They followed up this victory by attacking the
towns along the Seine which Chlotar previously had conquered.
The brothers' army cut gaping holes in the walls of the towns,
carried off a large number of the populace, and devastated the
area. Chlotar was so decisively defeated that his sole option was
to surrender most of his territory; he was left with only twelve
pagi between the Seine, the Oise, and the sea.6
Theudebert and Theuderic, two years after their triumph over
Chlotar, conducted a successful invasion of Gascony, concerning
which there is no information.7 In the winter of 605 Theuderic
fought against a force under the nominal leadership of Merovech,
Chlotar's son; the real commander, however, was Landri. This
campaign began in the autumn of 604 when Bertoald, mayor of
and the other in 600. Fred., IV, 17, treats the former. For Childebert see
Fred., IV, 15, 16.
5
Longnon, Geographic, pi. X, and the last section of ch. Ill above.
'Fred., IV, 20, and Longnon, Geographic, pi. X. L.H.F., ch. 37, indi-
cates that Theuderic leading a "hoste maximo ex Burgundia" defeated
Chlotar's "commoto Francorum exercitu."
7
Fred., IV, 21.
76
THE LAST OF THE RULING MEROVINGIANS
the palace for Burgundy, set out with a following of 300 men to
inspect the royal domains along the Seine (from Paris to the
Channel) which Theuderic had recently taken from Chlotar. At
Arele, on the Seine not far from the coast, Bertoald stopped to do
some hunting. When Chlotar learned where Bertoald was, he
sent Merovech and Landri against him. Bertoald fled south to
Orleans, and the Neustrians laid siege to the city. It was then
almost mid-November and the siege was soon raised. Theuderic
learned that Chlotar's forces were in the field and moved against
them toward the end of December. Bertoald and his followers,
in the van of Theuderic's army, were killed by Landri's men
when they advanced too far beyond the main body of troops.
Theuderic, however, was victorious; his troops captured Mero-
vech, but Landri managed to escape. Although Theudebert and
Chlotar confronted each other at Compiegne, peace was nego-
tiated and both armies returned home without fighting.8
In the next year Theuderic decided to go to war against his
brother Theudebert. The important men (leudes) of Theuderic's
kingdom were not anxious to fight, however, and while some of
them kept Theuderic occupied in conversation, a number of war-
riors murdered Protadius, the mayor of the palace, who had en-
couraged the war. As a result of this setback, Theuderic con-
sented to make peace with his brother. This incident indicates
once again the great power the magnates exercised in military
activities.9
In 609 Theuderic, at the urging of his mother, Brunhild, or-
dered the Irish missionary Columbanus to leave his kingdom.
Columbanus was driven out of his monastery at Luxeuil by
8
Ibid., IV, 25; Longnon, Geographic, pi. X; and F. Lot, L'Impdt fancier
et la capitation personelle (Paris, 1928), p. 102.
9
Fred., IV, 27: "Quod cum loco nomen Caratiaco Teudericus cum exercito
castra metasset ortabatur a leudibus suis ut cum Theudeberto pacem iniret.
Protadius singulos ortabatur ut prilium committeretur. . . . Protadius in
tenturio Teuderici regis cum Petro archyatro tabulam ludens sedebat. Cum
eum undique iam exercitus circumdasset et Teudericum leudis suae tenebat
ne illuc adgrederit. . . . Inruentes super eum, tenturium regis gladio undique
incidentis, Protadium interficiunt. Teudericus confusus et coactus cum
fratri Theudeberto pacem inivit et inlesus uterque exercitus revertit ad pro-
priis sedibus."
77
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
78
THE LAST OF THE RULING MEROVINGIANS
79
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
80
THE LAST OF THE RULING MEROVINGIANS
counts who administered cities, but rather were royal com-
panions serving the king,18 As further proof of the diverse nature
of the Merovingian military organization, both Theuderic and
Theudebert had organized water transport on at least the most
important rivers in their territory, and Theuderic maintained
stopping places at erstwhile imperial fortifications along the
Roman roads in his kingdom.
In 610, the year following the Columbanus episode, Theude-
bert raided Alsace, which belonged to his brother. Soon after this,
the brothers agreed to meet at the village of Seltz to settle their
dispute. Theuderic arrived with two units — each of which Frede-
gar extravagantly asserts comprised 10,000 men — and Theude-
bert was accompanied by a large force of Austrasians with which
he surrounded his brother's troops, thus ensuring for himself a
favorable settlement. While the brothers were engaged at Seltz,
Theubert's Alaman supporters raided Theuderic's territory
around Avenches. The Counts Abbelin and Herpin, with other
counts from the district, led their followers against the Alamans
but were defeated and sustained severe losses.19
Though Fredegar exaggerates the size of Theuderic's force at
Seltz, it was probably impressive to elicit such a reaction; and
the Austrasian force which surrounded it must have been huge
indeed. The term used to describe Theudebert's army—magnus
exercitw Austrasiomm — might even suggest a special levy of
some kind. Theuderic's troops, by contrast, are called escaritas
and this is the only appearance of the term in medieval literature.
Escaritos seems to have been replaced by the word scant (the
members of a scara) .20 These scant, which were picked or special
troops, are mentioned in the sources throughout the later Mero-
vingian era. The escaritos commanded by Theuderic in 610 may
be identified as a part of the score Burgundiae which in turn may
have been a part or all of the standing army of Burgundy dis-
cussed in the previous chapter. Theuderic's force which defended
18
See the bibliography cited in ch. Ill, n. 60, above.
" Fred., IV, 37.
20
J. F. Niemeyer, Mediae Latinitatis Lexicon Minus (Leiden, 1963), pp.
943-944. Cf. J. F. VerBruggen, "L'Annee et la strategic de Charlemagne,"
Karl der Grosse (Dusseldorf, 1965), I, 421-422.
81
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
82
THE LAST OF THE RULING MEROVINGIANS
83
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
84
THE LAST OF THE RULING MEROVINGIANS
came duke of Gascony, used his pueri to murder Erminarius,
while the Dukes Amalgar and Arnebert, and Willebad, the patri-
cian of Burgundy, did away with Brodulf. Arnebert also got rid
of Boso of fitampes. Aighyna, Amalgar, and Arnebert all held
the title dux, but were generally at the court and held no ad-
ministrative position at the time they were assigned to kill those
magnates whom Chlotar and Dagobert considered dangerous.25
From these examples of magnates who were eliminated it
should not be concluded that Chlotar and Dagobert were vic-
timized by rebellious potentes. On the contrary, both these mon-
archs enjoyed strong support from the important men of Mero-
vingian Gaul. Though the transfer of power after the death of a
ruler was usually a critical period, Dagobert succeeded his father
with relatively little trouble by soliciting the aid of his magnates
(leudes). This may call to mind the transition from the reign of
Theuderic I to that of Theudebert I in 534, when the latter
gained the support of his magnates (leudes) with gifts and was
thus able to secure his throne in the face of his uncles' efforts
to deprive him of it. Such comparatively easy transfers of power
were rare during the Merovingian era, since the magnates often
sought to take advantage of these situations by selling their sup-
port to opposition forces, or by creating an opposition themselves.
Upon learning of Chlotar's death, Dagobert gathered his follow-
ers and their retainers in exercito, rode into Neustria, and secured
the loyalty of the magnates there; shortly after, he repeated that
process in Burgundy. Dagobert gave Aquitaine to his brother
Charibert; Fredegar notes that this grant included the cities of
Toulouse, Cahors, Agen, Perigueux, and Saintes, all of which
had local levies with the possible exception of Cahors. Sometime
after obtaining Aquitaine from Dagobert, Charibert brought Gas-
cony under his control.26
Because Chlotar and Dagobert faced little internal opposition,
both were able to spend the bulk of their military energy beyond
the borders of Gaul. For example, in either 622 or 623 Dagobert
led a large force across the Rhine to crush the Saxon rebellion
25
Fred., IV, 54, 55, 58.
28
Ibid., IV, 56, 57.
85
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
86
THE LAST OF THE RULING MEROVINGIANS
In the following year Dagobert prepared to go against the
Wends and summoned a force from Austrasia to take part in the
battle. He had with him select detachments (scara) from Neustria
and Burgundy, as well as numerous dukes and counts, presum-
ably with their own personal followings. The campaign was
canceled, however, when Dagobert arranged for the Saxons to
be used against the Wends.30
Dagobert called up the general levy of Burgundy in 635 for
the purpose of crushing a Gascon revolt. This force, under the
command of Chadoind, a referendary, included ten dukes and
Willebad, the Burgundian patrician, who probably commanded
the Burgundian scara. Chadoind's men defeated the Gascons,
who retreated into the mountains where they hid among the rocks
and gorges while the Merovingian army devastated Gascony. The
troops would have returned home with minimal losses had it not
been for the negligence of Duke Arnebert, but he and his unit, in
which were a number of important people (seniores and nobili-
ores), were massacred in the valley of the Soule. (It should be
noted that none of the ten dukes who served under Chadoind
in this campaign held administrative positions in specific terri-
tories. Aighyna was subsequently appointed duke of Gascony,
but Arnebert, Amalgar, Chramnelen, and Barontus all served at
Dagobert's court. The other five dukes are mentioned in no
other Merovingian texts.)31 In the same year as this Gascon up-
rising, Dagobert also threatened to send a Burgundian army into
Brittany, but the mere threat brought the Bretons to terms.32
The heterogeneity of the Merovingian military persisted into
the seventh century. That this diversity continued is proven by
the number of different combinations of terms Fredegar uses to
describe the Austrasian military: magnus exercitus Austrasiorum,
exercitus Austrasiorum, exercitus de Auster, exercitus de univer-
exercito Tolosano munerebus onorati revertunt ad propries sedibus." See
Gregory, Hist., IX, 31, for an earlier mention of the levy of Toulouse. Cf.
Thompson, The Goths in Spain, pp. 171-172.
30
Fred., IV, 74.
31
Ibid., IV, 54, 58, for Arnebert; 58, 73, 90, for Amalgar; 67, for Barontus;
90, for Chramnelen; and 54, 55, for Aighyna.
32
Ibid., IV, 78.
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THE LAST OF THE RULING MEROVINGIANS
under the Alaman Dukes Leutharius and Buccelin in Theudebald
I's campaign against Italy in 554, and continued to function well
into the seventh century.
The local levies which were so prominent during the civil wars
of Clovis's grandsons continued to be used by their successors,
but in a much more limited manner. The reason for their limited
value is that not only does a large amount of military action
occur in the Austrasian and Burgundian kingdoms (which do
not seem to have developed local levies at this time), but the
extensive military action which took place beyond the borders
of Gaul seems to have been beyond the competence of these
these units. As has already been mentioned, the erstwhile im-
perial elements of the Merovingian military, especially the mill-
tes, continued to function, as did the custodies, whose basis of
organization seems impossible to ascertain, the river fleets on
the major waterways, and the fortified positions along major
roads. Fredegar and the author of the Liber Historiae Francorum
used the terms comes and dux much more loosely than did Greg-
ory, and from their reports it may be suggested that many of
the men who held such titles in this period functioned in much
the same way as the untitled leaders of armed bands like Clau-
dius who resided at the court of Clovis's grandson Guntram.34
The magnates and their bands of armed followers also provide
another example of continuity in the Merovingian military. Dur-
ing this period of the last ruling Merovingians, the magnates
still exerted as much influence on military and political affairs
as they had in the past. Often their loyalty and support had to be
purchased with expensive "gifts" as was the case when Chlotar II
needed his magnates' aid to oppose the attack of Wintrio in 593.
On occasion, however, the magnates were unwilling to lead their
armed followings in the king's support, as in 605 when Theu-
deric's leudes refused to fight, or in 612 when the magnates who
had promised their support to Theuderic II's sons and their re-
gent, Brunhild, were bribed by Chlotar II and deserted the battle-
34
See ch. Ill, n. 60, above.
89
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
field, thus causing the death of the queen and her great-grand-
children. This was not altogether different from the desertion,
slightly more than a century earlier, of Ragnachar's leudes which
had cost him his kingdom and his life.
The monarchs also continued to support bands of personal
armed followers: men who served them at the court wherever it
might move. Several armed groups from Theuderic II's court saw
action in the Columbanus affair, Chlotar II used his retainers to
restrain his son Dagobert, and Theudebert II is said to have lost
his life because of the faithlessness of his personal followers who
allowed him to be captured by one of his brother's magnates.35
These armed followings in attendance upon the king, including
men called duces and comites in the sources, may be compared
to the bands employed by the magnates, for the monarch after
all was the most powerful magnate in the realm.
There seems to have been a certain continuity in the tactical
maneuvers of the Merovingian military as well. Siege warfare,
though less common than during the previous periods of Mero-
vingian rule, was nevertheless used in the investment of Orleans
and Wogastisburg. The relatively limited number of sieges was
probably due to a change in the theaters of warfare from the
more Romanized parts of Gaul with their fortresses and walled
cities to the Austrasian hinterland and areas beyond the Rhine.
Mass infantry tactics, though generally uncommon, appear once
again when less Romanized barbarians from beyond the Rhine
are introduced into Merovingian military affairs. Mounted forces,
so conspicuous in Theuderic Fs conquest of Thuringia in 531 and
in the campaigns of Desiderius and Boso a generation or so later,
were still evident in the operations undertaken during the reigns
of the last ruling Merovingians.
The various types of levies, personal followings, and standing
forces and the use of infantry, cavalry, siege operations, fortified
positions, and organized transportation and communication in-
dicate that the Merovingian military establishment and its tactics
35
Gesta Dagoberti, ch. 8, and V. Columbani, I, 28.
90
THE LAST OF THE RULING MEROVINGIANS
were marked by both diversity and continuity during the period
of the last ruling descendants of Clovis. The imperial and non-
Frankish barbarian elements which lent support to the Mero-
vingian leaders also illustrate this same continuity with the past
as well as the debt the Merovingian military owed to groups in
society other than the Franks.
91
CHAPTER V
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Rois Faineants AND MAYORS OF THE PALACE
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MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
94
Rois Faineants AND MAYORS OF THE PALACE
95
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
and his puppet, King Theuderic IV, who were residing at a villa
somewhere between Compiegne and Corbie. After a long hard
ride from Luxeuil, Ebroin reached Pont-Saint Maxence on the
Oise, found the unsuspecting guards (custodes] at the bridge
asleep, and had them killed. Once Ebroin's men had crossed the
Oise, word of their advance seems to have reached Leudesius
who sent out a force to delay them. Meanwhile, Leudesius and
his socii fled north with the king and the royal treasure. Ebroin
destroyed those sent against him and pursued the royal party.
At Basieux, some fifty miles from Pont-Saint Maxence, Leudesius
abandoned the treasure so that his party might move more ra-
pidly. But within another fifty miles Ebroin's men overtook and
captured the royal treasure and the king. Leudesius and many
of the magnates who supported him were put to death; others
fled into exile south of the Loire.9
Early in the last quarter of the seventh century, a Merovingian
king of strength and ability projected himself into this morass of
royal puppets and contending magnates. Dagobert II, who had
been banished to Ireland as a young man in the mid-650s, re-
turned in the 670s with the aid of Bishop Wilfrith of York and
with an armed following substantial enough to make credible his
long hair and his claim to the throne. His efforts to restore royal
power were opposed and, although he destroyed the strongholds
of several magnates, he ultimately fell before the swords of an
enemy faction. In this struggle for predominance Dagobert
seems to have been not so much a king as just another magnate
vying for supremacy — and not even the most powerful one as
his ancestors had been.10
It should be noted that Dagobert, by having his own armed
followers, seems to have been a rarity among the rois faineants.
8
L.H.F., ch. 45; Fred, con't., eh. 2.
10
V. Wilfrithi, ch. 28: "Et sic sanctus pontifex noster perfecit, suscipiens
eum de Hibernia venientem, per arma ditatum et virlbus socioram elcvatum
magnifice ad suam regionem emisit." See also ch. 33, in which Dagobert is
described as a "dissipator urbium" which Wallace-Hadrill, Long-Haired
Kings, p. 238, n. 3, conjectures to mean that he destroyed city walls to keep
them from being used as centers of resistance. For magnates in fortified
cities cf. Fred, con't., ch. 4. Also in ch. 33 of the V. Wilfrithi, a bishop is
described as leading a large warband.
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Rots Faineants AND MAYORS OF THE PALACE
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MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
98
Rois Faineants AND MAYORS OF THE PALACE
99
MEROVINGIAN MILITAKY ORGANIZATION
100
Rois Faineants AND MAYORS OF THE PALACE
101
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
In October Charles met the Arab army somewhere between
Poitiers and Tours and decisively defeated it. Though few details
concerning the battle of Poitiers can be ascertained, it has re-
ceived a great deal of attention, probably because it has symbol-
ized for many the turning back of the Muslims and the saving
of Christendom.25 Only two texts — somewhat contradictory in
nature — provide information of apparent historical value about
the battle. According to the continuator of Isidore's chronicle,
". . . the people of the North seemed like a wall, enduring un-
moveable, and like a firm glacial mass they remained together,
cutting down the Arabs with their swords."28
Fredegar's continuator asserts that ". . . Charles boldly pre-
pared his troops and aggressively charged the enemy. With
Christ's help he overthrew their tents. He continued the battle
slaughtering and destroying, and when their king Abd al-Rahrflan
was killed, he destroyed them, crushing the army. He fought and
conquered; victorious over his enemies he triumphed."27
The Isidorian continuator establishes a literary conceit by re-
ferring to the "people of the North" (gentes septentrionales) and
by describing their formation metaphorically as a "firm glacial
mass" (zonis rigoris glacialiter). Despite these affectations the
author's main thrust seems to emphasize the stolidness of
Charles's followers; permaneo (to endure, hold out, stay to the
end) and maneo (to stay or remain) are the verbs used to charac-
ont-ils trahi avant la bataille de Poitiers?" Le Moy0n Age, 74 (1968), 25-
26, presents a very convincing argument based largely on the Arab sources
for the traditional date of 732. See also Bachrach, "Charles Martel," pp.
72-73, and Donald Bullough, "Europae Pater: Charlemagne and His
Achievement in the Light of Recent Scholarship," EHR, LXXV (1970),
84-89.
25
Jean-Henri Roy and Jean Devoisse, La Bataille de Poitiers (Paris,
1966), 334-335, provide an extensive list of works on the battle of Poitiers.
^Isidori continuatio Hispana, chs. 104-105, pp. 361-362: ". . . gentes
septentrionales in hicto oculi ut paries inmobiles permanentes sicut et zoraa
rigoris glacialiter manent adstricti, Arabes gladio enecant." This chronicler
also has been called Isidorus Pacensis and the Anonymous of Cordoba.
"Fred, con't, ch. 13: "Contra quos Carlus princeps audacter aciem in-
struit, super eosque belligerator inruit. Christo auxiliante tentoria eorum
subvertit, ad proelium stragem conterendam accurrit interfectoque rege
eorum Abdirama prostravit, exercitum proterens, dimicavit atque devicit;
sicque victor de hostibus triumphavit."
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Rots Faineants AND MAYORS OF THE PALACE
103
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
In contrast to the continuator of Isidore's chronicle, the eon-
tinuator of Fredegar's chronicle seems to be the most trustworthy
source for the career of Charles Martel. Count Childebrand,
Charles's half-brother, and probably a participant in the battle
of Poitiers, sponsored and oversaw the writing of the section con-
cerning this particular battle.80 It would seem unlikely that the
count would have permitted Fredegar's continuator to describe
the battle inaccurately — that is, if Charles's followers had stood
in a phalanx the count would not have allowed the chronicler to
write that they charged the enemy or vice versa. Thus it seems
reasonable to accept this version of the story.
Throughout the rest of his life, Charles campaigned vigorously.
The year after his victory at Poitiers he invaded Burgundy with
his magnates and their followers, and subjugated it to his authori-
ty. He then gave his leudes lands in the Lyonnais so that they
could maintain his interests in Burgundy. At about the same time
or perhaps a little earlier, Charles gained control of the Orleanais,
confiscated the holdings of his enemies in the area, and granted
some of this wealth to his satellites.31
In 734 Charles led a naval expedition against the Frisians who
had rebelled against him. His fleet penetrated between the
islands of Westergo and Ostergo, he encamped on the banks of
the Boom, defeated the Frisians, killed their leader Bubo, and
returned to Francia with an abundance of spoils.82 While Charles
was in Frisia, Eudo died. Charles therefore gathered the mag-
nates of his kingdom together with their followers; they crossed
the Loire and traveled to Bordeaux and then to Blaye. He pro-
century forgery (Levison, p. 91); Roy and Devoisse, Poitiers, pp. 293-294,
seem to accept a late date: "Extrait de 1'anonyine de Cordoue (vers 1376-
1437)." The Chron. Moissiac, p. 290, calls Eudo "princeps Aquitaniae."
80
Fred, con't., eh. 34: "Usque mine inluster vir Childebrandus comes
avunculus praedicto rege Pippino hanc historian! vel gesta Francorum dili-
gentissime scribere procuravit," This was written about 752 and antedates
the earliest possible date for the Isidorian continuator by at least two years.
Some scholars argue for two battles or encounters in the Poitiers campaign.
It is of course possible but unlikely that Isidore's continuator described one
engagement and Fredegar's continuator another.
31
Fred, con't., ch. 14. Bachrach, "Charles Martel," pp. 66-68. Bullough,
"Europae Pater," pp. 84-89. Cf. White, Med. Tech., p. 12.
32
Fred, con't., ch. 17.
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Rote Faineants AND MAYORS OF THE PALACE
105
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
106
Rois Faineants AND MAYOHS OF THE PALACE
107
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
Alps, drove Theudebald from his rocky retreat, and once more
subjected the duchy. The next year the brothers invaded Gas-
cony; the inhabitants, after first provoking the mayors, suc-
cumbed without a battle. The Alamans, however, again rebelled
and Carloman's army (exercitus) crushed them and he executed
many.40
In 747 Carloman retired to a monastery and Peppin ruled
alone. The Saxons rebelled against their new ruler, breaking the
oath they had sworn earlier to Carloman. Peppin's followers (ex-
ercitus), with the help of the Wends and the Frisians, invaded
Saxon territory; the Saxons submitted without a fight and prom-
ised to pay an annual tribute of 500 cows. The Bavarians revolted
in 749 and Peppin moved against them with a large force. The
rebels fled across the Inn and Peppin established his camp on
the banks of the river, preparing to attack the enemy from the
river craft which he ordered to be made ready for that purpose.
Seeing the imminence of the peril presented by Peppin's naval
preparations, the Bavarians decided to yield without a fight.41
Throughout the next two years Peppin ruled in peace and his
Merovingian puppet, Childeric III, reigned from his oxcart. First
with Carloman, and later alone, Peppin had subjugated the
former Merovingian kingdoms (except Aquitaine) to his control.
In 751 this Carolingian mayor, the true ruler of Gaul, became
Rex Francorum, replacing the Merovingian who merely reigned.
Thus the Merovingian dynasty came to an end and with it the
epoch of the mayors and the rots faineants.*2
The military in this era (638-751), as described in the numer-
ous campaigns treated above, cannot be characterized with a
simple generalization. In 638 Dagobert had left his sons a very
complex military organization. The Roman heritage was pre-
served in the milites, fortress garrisons, and centenae, and to
some degree in naval organization on the major rivers, and in
defensive organization on the old Roman road system. The
* Fred, con't., chs. 27, 28, 29.
tt
lW.,chs. 30, 31,32.
"Ibid., ch. 33: ". . . commoto exercito cum magno agmine appara-
tu. . . ."
108
Rois Faineants AND MAYORS OF THE PALACE
109
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
sodales and socii to attack Ebroin. Peppin also used loyal mag-
nates with their followers, or perhaps his own personal retainers,
to garrison strongholds under his control.
The forces led by Charles Martel and Peppin III are described
with some consistency by Fredegar's continuator. On four occa-
sions Charles's army is simply called an exercitus.43 One of these
forces which the continuator calls an exercitus is described by the
author of the Liber Historiae Francorum, upon whom the former
relies, as being formed of Charles's sodales.** At one point Frede-
gar's continuator depicts Charles's army as an agmen multitude
and at another time as a hostis Francorum.45
Fredegar's continuator describes eight of the forces led by the
mayors Carloman and Peppin III before the latter became king.
All but one of these are described simply as exercitus.46 The re-
maining body is called an exercitus generalis cum Francis or a
general army including Franks.47 Thus eleven of the fourteen
forces led by the mayors during the last thirty-five years of the
Merovingian era concerning which there is a clear description are
denoted by the term exercitus. Both Fredegar and his continuator
consistently use the term exercitus to mean a personal armed
following during the period of the last two Carolingian mayors.
When Fredegar's continuator wants to indicate some other kind
of force (such as a general levy), he uses a term like exercitus
generalis. Some additional light on the nature of the term exer-
citus as utilized by Fredegar's continuator may be obtained from
a description of Peppin's forces in 740: "Peppinus . . . commoto
exercito, cum avunculo suo Childebrando duce et multitudine
primatem et agminum satellitum plurimorum. . . . "48
The personal armed followings of the magnates seem to have
dominated the military in Austrasia, and this was probably the
case in Neustria and perhaps also in Burgundy. In Aquitaine, the
most Romanized part of Gaul, a more complex military structure
43
Ibid., chs. 9, 10, 13, 18.
44
L.H.F., 52.
45
Fred, con't, chs. 12, 19.
48
Ibid., chs. 24, 25, 27, 29, 31, 32.
" Ibid., ch. 26.
48
Ibid., ch. 24.
110
Rois Faineants AND MAYORS OF THE PALACE
Ill
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
Merovingian history. Chaubedo's attack in 643 seems to have
been more a personal effort than a mass charge, and not com-
parable to Theuderic I's charge across the Thuringian plains in
531 or Landri's at Soissons in 593 or Dagobert's against the Sax-
ons in 623. Under the mayors of the palace there seem to have
been no mounted shock attacks after the battle of Poitiers;
though at the battle itself Charles Martel's followers who charged
the Muslims, overran their tents, and pursued them hotly may
well have done so on horseback and not on foot.50
Thus, although the Merovingian kings gradually lost control
of Gaul to the mayors and the magnates, their military organiza-
tion, which had become more diverse through the centuries, but
had retained much of the Roman past, continued to play a sig-
nificant and influential role in this last century of Merovingian
history.
M
Bachrach, "Charles Martel," pp. 53-57.
112
CHAPTER VI
Conclusion
LTHOUGH previous studies dealing with Merovingian military
Aorganization have been limited to a small selection of the
available evidence, the methods and conclusions of the more
influential scholarly works are worth discussing if only to indi-
cate how they might have benefited from a use of the entire
corpus of evidence.
In his Institutions militaires de la France which appeared in
1863, Edgard Boutaric devoted some nineteen pages to the mili-
tary of "la premiere race."1 He argued that the Franks as an
ethnic group in the Merovingian kingdoms were only a minority
of the population and had to rely heavily upon their Gallo-
Roman subjects for both the conquest and the defense of Gaul.2
Nevertheless, when discussing the armament and organization of
the Merovingian armies, Boutaric seems to ignore his earlier re-
marks and the evidence on which they are based and allows the
Byzantine historian Agathias's characterization of the Franks as
an ethnic group to serve as a description of the rank and file of
the Merovingian armies.3 Boutaric does argue, however, that the
mounted bodyguards of the kings and the armed followers of
1
Paris, 1863, pp. 50-69.
2
Boutaric, Inst. milit., pp. 50-54. Fustel de Coulanges, Hist, des inst.,
IV, 293ff, generally agrees with this conclusion.
3
Boutaric, Inst. milit., pp. 64-65.
113
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
the magnates formed a class of professional soldiers and played
an important role in the Merovingian military.4 He further main-
tains that imperial influence was felt especially in the organiza-
tion of siege warfare.5 Perhaps the most crucial weaknesses of
Boutaric's work are the inadequate length of his study, which
does not allow full exploitation of the sources, and his neglect
of the military during the last century of Merovingian history.
Boutaric's balanced though limited account of the Merovingian
military has won few adherents among the most influential his-
torians in the field. From the many articles, essays, and chapters
of general works which have appeared since 1863, an image of
the Merovingian military emerges of poorly armed and ill-disci-
plined levies of infantrymen performing military service in re-
sponse to a primal Teutonic duty owed by all freemen. Roman
military institutions are generally regarded as having ceased to
exist, and the numerically preponderant and tactically decisive
elements of the Merovingian military from 481 until at least 732
are the farmer-soldiers of the pagi fighting under their counts.
With the general acceptance of this view, scholars have devoted
their efforts to ascertaining when and under what circumstances
these levies of Prankish footmen, supported on occasion by Gallo-
Romans, were replaced by heavily armed knights who, serving as
feudal vassals, are alleged to have dominated the battlefields of
Europe during the Middle Ages.6
Heinrich Brunner's 1887 article, "Der Reiterdienst und die An-
fange des Lehnwesens," embodies what is today the dominant
picture of the Merovingian military.7 Relying heavily upon the
writings of Procopius and Agathias, Brunner unequivocally
*Ibid., pp. 64-67. Fustel de Coulanges, Hist, des inst., IV, 289, argues
the opposite: "L'armee composee de vrais soldats c'est desorganisee et dis-
paru."
5
Boutaric, Inst. milit., p. 66.
8
Claudio Sanchez-Albornoz, En torno a las Ortgenes del Feudalism*)
(Mendoza, 1942), III, 1-27, and Lynn T. White, Jr., Medieval Technology
and Social Change (Oxford, 1962), pp. 5, 6, 7, 137, and 138.
7
ZRG, VIII, 1-38, reprinted in Brunner, Forschungen zur Geschichte des
deutschen und franzdsischen Rechts (Stuttgart, 1894), pp. 39-74. All cita-
tions here are to the former. See also Brunner, Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte,
2nd ed. (Munich, 1928), II, 269ff. Cf. Georg Waitz, Deutsche Verfassungs-
geschichte (Berlin, 1882), II, passim.
114
CONCLUSION
115
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
116
CONCLUSION
117
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
standing cavalry two conditions, asserts von Mangoldt-Gaudlitz,
were necessary: the economic means to support large numbers of
horsemen, and an enemy which could be combated effectively
only on horseback. Basing his interpretation on these two pre-
requisites, he concludes that as the Franks came to dominate
more territory they obtained the means to support a greater num-
ber of horsemen; at the same time the Franks found it ncessary
to fight against the Visigoths, Avars, Lombards, and Muslims, all
of whom, he maintains, fought on horseback and against whom
the Franks could be decisive only as cavalrymen. Having thus
defined the problem and the framework for its solution, von
Mangoldt-Gaudlitz tries to demonstrate the gradual development
of horsemen among the Franks by listing instances in which
fighting forces of the Merovingian kings and magnates are noted
as appearing in battle or some paramilitary operation on horse-
back.18 He then makes a similar catalog for the Carolingian
period. This statistical exercise is completed by counting the
instances of mounted Merovingian and Carolingian units men-
tioned in the sources selected. He concludes that since the refer-
ence to horsemen gradually increased throughout the period
(500-900) in rough proportion to both Prankish expansion and
Prankish wars against mounted enemies, then the number of
horsemen increased also.19
The diverse nature and varying quantity and quality of the
source materials of the early Middle Ages invalidate von Man-
goldt-Gaudlitz's statistical method which is based upon the as-
sumption that the surviving notices of equestrian activity in the
limited number of selected sources are a representatively bal-
anced sample of the whole. These criticisms of von Mangoldt-
Gaudlitz's statistical method may not, however, convince the less
mathematically oriented reader of the work's weaknesses. For
those who would defend von Mangoldt-Gaudlitz's work it should
be noted that he devotes only thirteen pages to the written
sources of the Merovingian period, disregards much of the evi-
18
Von Mangoldt-Gaudlitz, Reiterei, pp. 13-20, and 49.
™lbid., pp. 21-25, and 25-49. The archaeological evidence is used in a
similar manner, pp. 85, 67-73.
118
CONCLUSION
deuce, ignores the last century of the era, and seems to think
that all elements in the Merovingian armies were German. In
fairness to the author it should be pointed out that his work is not
an attempt to present a balanced account of Merovingian mili-
tary organization, but simply an effort to destroy Brunner's
thesis of military revolution. In doing so von Mangoldt-Gaudlitz
agrees with Brunner that there were only Germanic fighting men,
but to contradict Brunner's contention that the Merovingian
Franks were preponderantly footmen, he introduces fifteen texts
indicating that Merovingian forces served on horseback.
Eugen von Frauenholz, Hans Delbriick, and Ferdinand Lot
have tried to demonstrate the gradual development of cavalry
in Gaul, and deserve some mention if only because their works
are frequently cited as authoritative. Von Frauenholz states, with-
out evidence, that the Franks had an important body of horse-
men which continued to develop throughout the Merovingian
era. In support of this position he argues that horses were avail-
able to the Franks and since mounted combat was the most
effective way to fight, it would have been absurd for the Farnks
not to have done so.20 This technical determinism is invalid in
terms of method, and surely not a substitute for evidence.21
In his remarks on the Merovingian military Delbriick does little
more than von Frauenholz to inspire the confidence of his read-
ers. He makes relatively few references to the Merovingian armed
forces, reproduces a few passages from the sources which he occa-
sionally introduces with a cryptic sentence or two, but on the
whole makes no effort to indicate their relevance. Nor does he
endeavor to evaluate the sources critically or to integrate the
material he quotes into his narrative. He concludes, nevertheless,
that the gradual development of horsemen among the Franks was
complete by Charlemagne's reign, at which time vassal armies
composed of horsemen were used exclusively.22
20
Das Heerwesen der germanischen Friizett (Munich, 1935), p. 61.
=1
P. Sawyer and R. Hilton, "Technical Determinism: The Stirrup and the
Plough," Past and Present, XXIV (1963), 90ff, provide some trenchant com-
ment on this method.
22
Geschichte der Kriegskunst in Rahmen der poUtischen Geschichte, 2nd
ed. (Berlin, 1921), II, 427-431, 453-459, 475-476. The first edition ap-
peared in 1907.
119
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
Ferdinand Lot's study is still the most scholarly attempt to
show the gradual development of the use of horsemen in Gaul.
Lot's primary concern is numbers and in this area he is reason-
able and draws some perceptive conclusions.28 Lot admits that
the Merovingian armies were composed of many peoples, but
allows his section on the "organisation, tactique, et armament des
Francs" as an ethnic group described in the Byzantine sources
to stand for the whole of the Merovingian military. Lot assumes
gradual development to be the nature of historical change during
the Middle Ages and rejects Brunner's thesis out of hand, despite
his own failure to deal with the sources on the last century of
the Merovingian military.24
In reaction to Delbriick's extreme claims that mounted vassals
exclusively formed the Carolingian army, W. Erban and H. Fehr
not only argue that the Merovingian army was composed essen-
tially of free Prankish warriors fighting on foot in the period of
Clovis and his sons (as most scholars who argued for gradual
change believed), but follow Brunner in contending that this was
the case in the era of Charles Martel as well. Yet where Brunner
saw a radical change from an army with a preponderance of
infantry to one with a preponderance of cavalry, Erban, Fehr,
and Karl Rubel maintained that the Carolingian armies were
neither in law nor in fact numerically superior in horsemen, but
predominantly infantry levies of free Franks. By concentrating on
legal sources and interpreting them with an image of Germanic
society rooted in the Mark theory, these authors create a model
of the military which owes more to nineteenth-century romanti-
cism than to early medieval evidence.25
a
L'art m<mre et les armies au mot/en age (Paris, 1946), I, 74-79.
"•Ibid., pp. 80-90. See also F. Lot, C. Pfister, and F. L. Ganshof, Les
destinees de Fempire en Occident de 395 A 888, 2nd ed. (Paris, 1940), pp.
665ff, and especially pp. 687-688. White, Med. Tech., p. 137, attacks Lot's
a priori assumptions about the nature of historical change, only to substitute
another
25
set of a priori assumptions.
W. Erban, "Zur Geschichte des karolingischen Kriegswesens," HZ, CI
(1908), 321-336; Fehr, "Das Waffenrecht der Bauern im Mittelalter," ZHG,
XXXV (1914), llSff; Rubel, "Frankisches und spatromisches Kriegswesen,"
Banner Jahrbiicher, CXIV (1906), 136-142. Brunner, "Reiterdienst," pp. 3-
4, and 7, "Der Zeitpunct, in welchem die Reiterei bei den Franken das
Ubergewicht iiber die Fusstruppen erlangte. . . ." He argues that by Char-
120
CONCLUSION
121
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
122
CONCLUSION
in his role as a fighting man within the framework of social insti-
tutions. Though this effort is noteworthy for its attempt to relate
modern sociological techniques to early medieval life, Bodmer
bases his work on the assumptions set forth in the historical
studies discussed above. This may help to explain why Bodmer
limits his study to the period from 481 to 639 and omits more
than a century of the Merovingian era. Bodmer is in the unenvi-
able position of writing a work of historical sociology in which
his sociological investigations and insights, no matter how fruit-
ful, are severely handicapped by the inadequate historical studies
upon which he has been forced to rely.31
As has been seen, the most influential works on the Mero-
vingian military have been distortingly selective in their use of
evidence and chronologically limited in their choice of subject
matter. These previous historical interpretations have been de-
termined by two significant trends. The first concentrates upon
the Franks as an ethnic group and equates their military insti-
tutions with those of the entire Merovingian military establish-
ment. For the most part scholars have been satisfied with this
oversimplification of the Merovingian military organization in
which half-naked levies of poorly armed and ill-disciplined
Frankish infantrymen, depicted as the numerically preponderant
and tactically decisive military element, performed military ser-
vice because of some putative Teutonic duty.32 The second trend
81
Zurich, 1957, pp. 9-14. Bodmer discusses the value of previous works
and admits that the Merovingian period has been badly treated: "In den
meisten dieser Werker spielt die Merowingerzeit die Rolle einen Stiefkin-
des." Nevertheless, Bodmer relies heavily on at least three of these works,
and says of Delbriick's study: "Delbriicks Geschichte der Kriegskunst
enthalt neben der leidigen Polemik doch so viel Gutes, dass sich di Bentit-
zung dieses Werkes stets empfiehlt."
M
A recent historical conference produced two massive volumes on mili-
tary matters in the early Middle Ages; Ordinamenti Militarl in Occidente
nell 'Alto Medioevo (Settimane di Studio del Centro Italiano di Studi sutt
'Alto Medioevo, XV [Spoleto, 1968]). Of the many studies which appear in
these volumes only one, Joachim Werner, "Bewaffnung und Waffenbeigabe
in der Merowingerzeit," I, 95-108, deals with military organization in
Merovingian Gaul in even a limited manner. This essay is devoted essen-
tially to Frankish weapons. In their expansion on Schmidt's work, Zolner
(with J. Werner), Geschichte der Franken, pp. 150-167, provide no con-
ceptual innovation.
123
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
124
CONCLUSION
125
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
126
CONCLUSION
127
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
128
Appendix
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APPENDIX
131
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
soldiers having neither bows nor spears [Sopara], but each
man carried a sword and shield and one axe. Now the iron
head of this weapon was thick and exceedingly sharp on
both sides, while the wooden handle was very short. And
they are accustomed always to throw these axes at one
signal in the first charge and thus to shatter the shields of
the enemy and kill the men.3
Some two decades after Procopius gave this account, Agathias
wrote:
The military equipment of this people [20vos] is very simple.
. . . They do not know the use of the coat of mail or
greaves and the majority leave the head uncovered, only a
few wear the helmet. They have their chests bare and backs
naked to the loins, they cover their thighs with either
leather or linen. They do not serve on horseback except in
very rare cases. Fighting on foot is both habitual and a
national [Trarptov] custom and they are proficient in this. At
the hip they wear a sword and on the left side their shield
is attached. They have neither bows nor slings, no missile
weapons except the double edged axe and the angon
[ayywvas] which they use most often. The angons are spears
[Sopara] which are neither very short nor very long; they
can be used, if necessary, for throwing like a javelin, and
also, in hand to hand combat. The greater part of the angon
is covered with iron and very little wood is exposed. Above,
at the top of the spear, on each side from the socket itself
where the staff is fixed, some points are turned back, bent
like hooks and turned toward the handle. In battle, the
Frank throws the angon, and if it hits an enemy the spear
is caught in the man and neither the wounded man nor
anyone else can draw it out. The barbs hold inside the
flesh causing great pain and in this way a man whose
wound may not be in a vital spot still dies. If the angon
strikes a shield, it is fixed there, hanging down with the
butt on the ground. The angon cannot be pulled out be-
cause the barbs have penetrated the shield, nor can it be
cut off with a sword because the wood of the shaft is cov-
ered with iron. When the Frank sees the situation, he quick-
ly puts his foot on the butt of the spear, pulling down and
the man holding it falls, the head and chest are left un-
protected. The unprotected warrior is then killed either by
a stroke of the axe or a thrust with another spear [86pan].
Such is the equipment of the Frankish warriors. . . .4
8
Procopius, H.W., VI, xxv, 3ff.
4
Agathias, Hist., II, 5.
132
APPENDIX
Although it is clear that Agathias is giving a general descrip-
tion of Prankish armament and tactics, it is less obvious in Pro-
copius's case. Procopius begins by characterizing the army that
Theudebert led into Italy in 539, but he soon makes his account
a general one with a portrayal of the Prankish ax and tactics
"always" («c() used by the Franks. It is not unfair to argue that
Procopius, as well as Agathias, intended to describe Prankish
military customs in general rather than the armament and tactics
of a particular army in a particular campaign. Though Procopius,
as a member of Belisarius's staff in Italy, may have had the
opportunity to obtain information from men who had faced the
Franks in battle in 539, there is no evidence to support this. By
providing his readers with a grossly exaggerated figure for the
size of Theudebert's army, Procopius casts doubt upon the accu-
racy of his remarks in this passage.
Procopius asserts that the Prankish infantry, which he contends
made up the vast majority of Theudebert's army, do not carry a
spear ($6pv), while Agathias argues that the ango, which he
classes as a spear (So'pu), is the Prankish foot soldier's primary
weapon and spends almost two-thirds of his description demon-
strating how the weapon is used and why it is so effective. Aga-
thias's account may even indicate that at least some Prankish
footmen carried more than one spear: the ango mentioned above
and a spear (86pv) used for thrusting. In yet another context
Aagthias portrays Prankish infantry using a javelin (a/covi-iov).5
Although Procopius does not mention the ango, he maintains that
the throwing ax is the Prankish infantryman's key weapon, and
his description of its construction and use dominates his account
of Prankish tactics and armaments. Agathias also classifies the
Franks' ax as a missile weapon, but he pictures it as a hand
weapon as well.
A study of the archaeological evidence is of little help in clari-
fying the use of weapons since Prankish graves yield not only
angos and axes, but a variety of spearheads.6 Sidonius Apol-
linaris, writing during the second half of the fifth century, states
that the Franks used the ax and also the ango (lancea uncata). Is
it possible that Sidonius's pedantic letter to his friend Domnicius,
a military buff who was "fond of looking at arms and armed
5
Ibid., 1,15.
8
Salin, Civ. merov., I, 356, 377, 385, 389, for angos; III, 23ff, for axes;
and 13ff, for a variety of spears. Werner, "Bewaffnung und Waffenbei-
gabe," pi. V, shows that the distribution of ongo-finds are east of the Rhine
which strongly suggests that the Franks whom Agathias describes were not
recruited from Merovingian lands but from trans-Rhenish areas.
133
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
134
APPENDIX
tions, however, are relative judgments; what may be a small
number to one observer may well be considered a large number
by another, whereas what might be a rare occasion to one might
seem reasonably frequent to another. The observer's norm or
basis for calculation determines such judgments and the norm
of the classical world was one horseman to every ten footmen.11
For the Byzantine army of the mid-sixth century, field forces
seem to have been about fifty percent infantry and fifty percent
cavalry. It should also be noted that for contemporaries, the
Byzantine cavalry was the core of the army, and the infantry
played an insignificant role.12 Seen in light of their norm, Pro-
copius and Agathias may well have thought that horsemen were
few among the Franks or rarely used by them. In lieu of any
more definite data (if Procopius and Agathias are to be trusted
on this point at all) the sole conclusion that can be drawn is that
horsemen were of less importance to the Franks as an ethnic
group than they were to the Byzantines. There is, however, sub-
stantial information about Frankish military customs from which
a much different interpretation emerges. Agathias himself writes
of a small battle near Rimini in 554, in which the Byzantines
fought against a force of some 2000 Franks, about half of whom
were horsemen.13 Perhaps this was one of those rare occasions
when, according to Agathias, the Franks fought on horseback.
In 531 Theuderic I and Chlotar I led an expedition of what
seems to have been purely Frankish warriors into Thuringia and
sought out the main force of the enemy. Shortly before the two
armies were to engage, the Thuringians managed to maneuver
the Franks into what they hoped would be a disadvantageous
position. They dug pits in a field and covered them with sod so
that the approaching Frankish horsemen would be unaware of
the trap. When the Franks charged across the field to meet the
Thuringians, their horses were tripped up by the ditches so that
they were slowed down and almost had to turn back.14
The elaborate preparations made by the Thuringians suggest
that they had had some previous experience with Frankish caval-
ry; because they expected the Franks to be on horseback, they
had to devise plans to combat their mounted tactics. The Thur-
ingians may well have learned the capabilities of the Frankish
11
J. K. Anderson, Ancient Greek Horsemanship (Berkeley, 1961), p. 141.
12
Bury, Later Roman Empire, II, 77-78, 85, 132, 136ff. Robert Grosse,
Romische Militarsgeschichte vom Gallienus bis zum Beginn der byzantin-
ischen Themenverfassung (Berlin, 1928), pp. 283ff, and 313ff.
13
Agathias, Hist., I, 21.
14
Gregory, Hist., Ill, 7.
135
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
horsemen some fifteen years earlier when Theuderic intervened
quite successfully in one of their civil wars.15 Gregory of Tours
relates the story of the charge of Frankish horsemen in detail
without a word of surprise concerning their equestrian tactics.
Gregory, of course, lived in Gaul and was probably accustomed
to seeing Frankish horsemen. The Thuringians certainly were not
surprised by the Franks' use of horsemen in 531; indeed they had
prepared for it. It is difficult to say how Procopius and Agathias
would have reacted had they witnessed this battle.
Horsemen also seem to have been an important element of
Clovis's army. Before his campaign against the Visigoths in 507,
Clovis issued specific orders to his troops concerning the taking
of fodder and water for their mounts. Although these commands
may well have been meant primarily for his Armorican allies
(among whom were a significant number of Alan horsemen), it
was apparently an unimportant Frank — not a noble or royal
bodyguard — who was executed for violating the orders.16 To
support further the conclusion that cavalrymen played a signifi-
cant role in Clovis's forces, it should be recalled that Clovis and
his followers were identified by at least one comparatively well-
informed contemporary as descendants of the Sicambri who were
well known for their equestrian prowess.17 Clovis's father, Chil-
deric, was so equestrian-oriented that he had the head of his
warhorse entombed with him at Tournai.18 The Franks of the
fifth and even the fourth centuries had gained such a reputation
for their horsemanship that they were recruited by the empire
for cavalry regiments. Of the four primarily Frankish units listed
in the Notitia Dignitatum in approximately 425, all were cavalry
regiments.19
Although Frankish equestrian prowess seems to have been
ignored in the East, it was widely recognized in the West. Ra-
banus Maurus quotes a common Frankish proverb to the effect
that one must begin at puberty if one is to become an effective
horseman.20 Einhard asserts that the chase and equestrian exer-
cises were Frankish national customs.21 What some scholars con-
15
18
Ibid., Ill, 4.
17
Ibid., 11, 37.
Caesar, B.C., VI, 35.
18
Cf. Wallace-Hadrill, Long-Haired Kings, p. 162.
19
See ch. I, n. 33.
20
Rabanus Maurus, De procinctu Romanae miliciae, p. 3: "Unde et vul-
garicum proverbium ac nostris familiare est quod dicitur: in pube posse fieri
equitem, majoris vero aetatis aut vix aut numquam."
a
Einhard, V. Karoli, ch. 22: "Exercebatur adsidue equitando ac venando:
136
APPENDIX
sider the national arms of the Ripuarian Franks are listed in the
first extant copy of their law code (about 630), which suggests
that the Ripuarians were also horsemen.22 Equestrian activity
among the Salians seems to have equaled that of the Ripuarians.
Chlotar II, for example, was as devoted to the chase as Charle-
magne.23 This was also true of Chilperic I, who was killed while
dismounting from his horse after returning from the hunt, and
of his son Merovech who rode out to the chase despite great
dangers.24
An abundance of horses, which is a prerequisite for effective
cavalry organization, is indicated clearly by the frequent legisla-
tion regarding them even in the earliest compilation of the Lex
Salica (about 510).25 Horses appear so frequently in the Salian
Prankish laws that at least one noted medieval economic historian
has been led to contend that the Franks had a great many horses
and thus could use them for plowing when everyone else used
oxen.28
The significance of horses is further illustrated by the elaborate
organization of horse-breeding estates under the Merovingian
kings. These estates were under the central control of the con-
stable (comes stabuli) who was an important member of the
royal household. Each estate was administered by a bailiff who
in turn supervised numerous wranglers and grooms. Because of
their jobs these men seem to have enjoyed a preferred position
in society which others of comparable legal or social status, but
of different occupational status, did not have.27
quod illi gentilicium erat, quia vix villa in terns natio invenitur quae in hac
arte Francis possit aequari."
"Lex Rib., 40 (36), 11.
21
Fred., IV, 42: ". . . Chlotharius . . . venacionem feramm nimium as-
siduae utens. . . ."
24
Gregory, Hist., V, 14: "Ait file praesto putans esse interfectores, ait ad
Merovechum; "Ut quid hie quasi signes et timidi resedemus et ut hebetis
circa basilicam occulimur? Verdant enim equi nostri, et acceptis accipitribus,
cum canibus exerceamur venatione spectaculisque patulis iocundemur.'" VI,
46: "Quadam vero die regressus de venatione iam sub obscura nocte, dum
de equo susceperitur et unam manu super scapulam pueri reteniret, ad-
veniens quidam eum cultro percutit sub ascellam iteratoque ictu ventrem
eius perforat; statimque profluente cupia sanguinis tarn per os quam per
aditum vulneris, iniquum fudit spiritum."
* Lex Sal., 9, 1; 10, 1; 23; 27, 3-5; 37, 15; 38, 1 and 3, 6 [7, 8]; 47, 1;
65,1.
* Charles Edmond Perain, "The Evolution of Agricultural Technique,"
The Cambridge Economic History, ed. M. Postan et al., 2nd ed. (Cam-
bridge, 1966), I, 142.
27
Fustel de Coulanges, Hist, des inst., IV, 148-149. Gregory, Hist., Ill,
15; V, 39; VIII, 40; IX, 38; and Gregory, G.M., I, 29.
137
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
If Procopius's and Agathias's remarks concerning the horse-
men of the Franks are understood as meaning that they had a
number of horsemen so inconsequential as to be hardly worth
notice, then the Byzantine writers and their interpreters are sure-
ly mistaken. If, on the other hand, their comments are taken to
imply that horsemen were of less importance to the Franks than
to the Byzantines, then they are probably correct. The thrust
of the evidence, however, seems to indicate that the Franks had
a relatively significant body of horsemen within the Merovingian
military establishment.
The utilization of Procopius's and Agathias's judgments con-
cerning Prankish armament and tactics would seem to require
more caution than has been usual heretofore. If one were to insist
that Procopius's description was of a specific force in a particular
campaign, the danger of generalizing about the Frankish military
from it is manifest. If, however, Procopius's account is a general
one, as argued here, then its defenders must realize that he and
Agathias contradict each other as decisively as both are contra-
dicted by sources closer to events and presumably better in-
formed.
Though both Byzantine authors list weapons that were surely
used by the Franks, the tactics they characterize are otherwise
unconfirmed. It must be made very clear that Procopius's and
Agathias's narratives are only of limited value for the study of
the Franks as an ethnic group and of no value if used as a
description of the heterogeneous Merovingian military.
138
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148
Index
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Index
Abbelin, Count, 81 Aprunculus, Bishop of Langres, 7
Abd al-Rahman, 101-102 Aquitaine, 38, 66, 69, 83, 85
Abundantius, Duke, 86 Arabs, 105
Adalgisel, Duke, 93, 97 Arele, 77
Aega, mayor of the palace, 94, 126 Arian Christians, 7
Aegilen, patrician, 58, 60, 62 Aridius, Gallo-Roman magnate, 9
Aetius, 3 Arigisel, Prankish magnate, 22, 30,
Agathias, 26, 113, 114, 131: on 32
Prankish warfare, 132-136; eval- Aries, 12, 17, 37
uation of, 137-138 Armati, 32, 49, 52
Agen, 85. See also Levies Armorici, 3, 10, 136
Aighyna, Saxon magnate, later Duke Arnebert, Duke, 84-85, 87
of Gascony, 84-85, 87 Arnulfings, 97
Aire, 67 Arvernians, 21, 31. See also Levies
Aix, 40 Audovald, Duke, 60
Alamans, 3, 5-8, 10, 12, 27, 36, 81, Audovar, 37-38, 70
86, 88, 101, 106, 124. See also Aurelianus, Gallo-Roman magnate, 8,
Laeti and Levies 15
Alans, 3, 10, 12, 15, 17, 36, 124 Austrasia, 28, 35, 47, 48, 67, 74, 75,
Alaric, King of the Visigoths, 11 82, 83, 84, 87-88, 97
Albi, 11 Austrasians, 28, 31, 32, 33, 43, 81,
Alsace, 81 83, 86, 97
Amalaric, King of the Visigoths, 26 Austrovald, Count, 62, 63
Amalbert, 94 Autun, 67, 78
Amalgar, Duke, 85, 87, 95 Auvergne, 20, 28. See also Levies
Amantius, patrician, 38 Auxerre, 48, 78
Amid, 52, 55 Avars, 36, 37, 43, 118
Amiens, 5 Avenches, 81
Amo, Lombard Duke, 40 Avignon, 9, 10, 17, 37, 39, 40, 54,
'Anbasa ibn Suhaim al-Kalbi, 101 55, 57, 67, 105, 111, 127
Angers, 47, 63. See also Levies Avius, magnate, 57
Ango, 132-134 Axes, 132-133
Angouleme, 12, 17, 53, 57. See also
Levies Barontus, Duke, 87
Aninsula, monastery of, 47, 48 Basilius, magnate, 38
Antestius, magnate, 63-64 Baudulf, magnate, 78
Antrustiones, 13, 14, 32, 33, 71, 72, Bavarians, 101, 108
97, 109 Bayeux, 10. See also Levies
151
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
Beaucaire, 62 Carloman, mayor of the palace, 106,
Belgica II, 5 108
Bella civilia, 36, 37, 43, 60 Casilinum, battle of, 27
Bellinzona, 60-61 Cautinus, Bishop of Auvergne, 7, 30
Beppolen, 63, 67 Cavalo, 78
Berchar, mayor of the palace, 98 Cavalry. See Horsemen
Bernay, 51 Cedinus, Duke, 61
Berre, battle of, 105 Celsus, patrician, 37-41
Berthar, Count, 78, 82, 95 Centenae, 25, 32, 34, 46, 71-72, 97,
Berthefred, Prankish magnate, 55, 108, 109, 124
64,65 Chadoind, referendary, 87
Bertoald, mayor of the palace, 76-77 Chalons, 29, 67
Bertoald, Saxon Duke, 86 Champagne, 48, 55, 75. See also
Berulf, Duke, 50-53 Levies
Besancon, 78, 80 Chanao, Count, 29
Beziers, 22 Charegisel, chamberlain, 43
Bladast, Duke, 53, 57 Chararic, regulus, 13
Blois, 57, 66, 76. See also Levies Charibert I, King, 29, 36, 38
Boantus, magnate, 64 Charibert II, King, 85
Bobo, Duke, 93 Charlemagne, 119
Bodilo, Prankish magnate, 95 Charles Martel, 99-106, 110-112,
Bordeaux, 12, 41, 48, 57, 67. See 115, 120, 122, 126, 127
also Levies Chartres, 10, 84. See also Levies
Boso, Duke, 63, 64, 67, 71 Chastel-Marlhac, 20-21
Boso of fitampes, magnate, 85 Chatuarian Franks, 14
Bourges, 50, 51, 53. See also Levies Chaubedo, magnate, 95, 112
Bretons, 52, 63, 64, 68 Childebert I, King, 18, 20, 22, 25,
Brioude, Church of Saint Julien at, 26, 29, 44, 58
20 Childebert II, King, 46-49, 54, 55,
Britain, 78 57, 60-61, 64-66, 72, 74-75
Britons, 3 Childebrand, Count, 104, 105, 110
Brittany, 29 Childeric, regulus, 4, 5, 14, 136
Brives-la-Gaillarde, 57 Childeric, Saxon magnate, 57
Brodulf, magnate, 84-85 Childeric II, King, 95, 97
Brunhild, Queen, 46-48, 77, 83-84, Childeric III, King, 107, 108
89 Chilperic I, King, 31, 36, 72, 79:
Bubo, Frisian chief, 104 and bella civilia, 41-43; death of,
Buccelin, Alaman Duke, 27, 89 56-57, 60, 137; forces of, 45, 51-
52, 54, 88; and local levies, 52, 54,
Bucellarii, 16, 23, 44 56, 66; and magnates, 44, 47, 50,
Burgundian kingdom, 20, 23, 32, 33, 55; military activity of, 45-49, 53
39, 41, 47, 55, 60, 67, 71, 74, 75, Childtrudis, 106
76, 84, 85, 86, 87: standing army Chlochiliach, Danish King, 18
of, 23, 41, 47, 55, 71, 76 Chlodomer, King, 18, 32
Burgundians, 3, 6, 7 Chlodovech, 38, 39-41, 43, 45, 47
Chlotar I, King, 18-22, 25, 28, 30-
Caberet, 62 32, 36, 37, 80
Cabriers, 22 Chlotar II, King, 57, 67, 74-77, 82-
Caesar, Julius, 14, 116 86, 89-90, 137
Cahors, 42, 85 Chlotar IV, King, 100
Cambrai, 3 Chora, 78
Camels, 58 Chramn, 29, 30, 34
Carcassonne, 17, 61-63, 71, 101 Chramnelen, Duke, 87, 95
152
INDEX
Chramnulf, magnate, 84 Ermanfred, Prankish magnate, 98,
Chrodoald, magnate, 93 109
Chunibert, Bishop of Cologne, 92 Erminarius, magnate, 84-85
Chunoald, Duke of Aquitaine, 106 Escaritos, 81
Ciuciolo, count of the palace, 48 Eudo, Duke of Aquitaine, 100-106
Claudius, magnate, 64, 89 Eunomius, Count, 50
Claudius, Visigothic commander, 63 Europenses, 103
Clovis, King, 3, 16, 18, 19, 31, 36, Eutropius, Gallo-Roman magnate, 16
88, 105: conversion to Christian- Exercitus, 81-83, 87-88, 97, 106-
ity, 6-7, 9; expands kingdom, 4-6, 110
9-13; fighting forces of, 13-15,
17, 124, 136; relations with Fara, magnate, 93
church, 7-8, 11 Feigned retreat, 28
Clovis II, King, 92, 94-95 Fideles, 31, 97
Cologne, 3, 67, 82 Firminus, Count, 28, 37-39, 70
Columbanus, 77-81, 90 Flaochad, mayor of the palace, 94-
Comes stabidi, 137 95
Compiegne, 77 Franks, 7, 13, 17, 27, 36, 113, 115,
Convenae, 58-60 118, 122, 124, 127, 131, 138
Coutance, 10 Fredegund, Queen, 42, 46, 47, 50,
Custodes, 50, 51, 62, 71, 78, 80, 88, 57, 63, 74
89, 96, 106 Frisia, 104
Frisians, 104, 108
Dagobert I, King, 84-86, 90, 92, 94,
96, 108-109, 112 Galactorius, Bishop of Beam, 7
Dagobert II, King, 109, 111 Gallien, 49, 52
Danes, 18, 20, 21, 34 Gallo-Romans, 3, 7, 15, 17, 36, 124
Desiderius, Duke, 47, 53, 57, 62, 63, Gap, 40
71 Gararic, Duke, 57
Die, 40 Garrisons: Angouleme, 12; Beau-
Dijon, 9, 29 caire, 62; Besancon, 78; Bordeaux,
Dio, 22 12; Caberet, 62; Carcassonne, 61,
Dodo, 99 71; Chastel-Marlhac, 21; Langres,
Domnicius, Gallo-Roman magnate, 34; Loches, 106; Saintes, 12; Sois-
133 sons, 45; Toulouse, 12; Tours, 51;
Dormelles, battle near, 76 Vienne, 24; Vollore, 20-21. See
Dragolen, Duke, 49, 52 also Antrustiones, Centenae, Cus-
Drogo, 98 todes, Mttites
Gascony, 53, 76, 85, 87, 103, 108
Eberulf, magnate, 64 Geneva, 67
Ebrachar, Duke, 63 Germania, 128
Ebroin, mayor of the palace, 95-98, Ghislemar, magnate, 98, 111
101, 109-111 Godegisel, Duke, 42
Ecdicius, Gallo-Roman magnate, 16, Godegisel, magnate, 65
23 Godigisel, Burgundian King, &
Edict of Paris, 84 Godinus, magnate, 44, 72
Egidius, Bishop of Rheims, 55-56 Godinus, son of Warnachar, 84
Einhard, 136 Godomar, Burgundian King, 22
Embrun, 40 Goths, 61, 62, 63, 68
Ennodius, Duke, 67 Gregory of Tours, 6, 11, 12, 18, 25-
Erchinoald, mayor of the palace, 94- 29, 36, 50, 135
95 Grimoald, son of Peppin I, 92-94, 97
153
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
Grimoald, son of Peppin II, 98 Levies: Alaman, 27, 81, 86, 88; Bur-
Gundobad, Burgundian King, 9 gundian, 61, 86, 87; Gascon, 99;
Gundobald, Duke, 42, 43, 46 general, 25, 60-61, 71, 107, 126;
Gundovald, the Pretender, 54-62, north of Seine, 61; north of Saone,
68,72 61; west of Rhone, 61; territorial
Gundulf, Duke, 55 of Champagne, 47, 60, 66, 68, 76,
Guntram, King, 29, 36, 48, 50, 67, 83, 125; trans-Rhenish, 35, 43, 46,
68, 72, 89, 97: and bella civilia, 55, 73, 76, 82-S3, 88, 93, 126-127
37-38, 41-42, 60; death of, 74; local (city) levies: Agen, 53, 63,
fighting forces of, 60, 62, 64, 66; 66, 68, 71, 76; Angers, 47, 52-53,
internal struggles of, 54-55; mili- 66, 76; Angouleme, 53, 61, 66, 76;
tary activity of, 39, 43, 47, 49, Auvergne, 37, 38, 43, 54, 61, 66,
53-54, 58-59, 61, 63-64 67, 70, 71, 76; Bayeux, 52, 66, 76;
Guntram Boso, Duke, 42, 46, 52, 54, Blois, 57, 66, 76; Bordeaux, 53,
55,67 63, 66, 68, 71, 76; Bourges, 55,
57, 60-61, 66, 71, 76; Chartres,
Hermanfrid, Thuringian King, 20 66, 76; Chateaudun, 42-43, 46,
Herpin, Count, 81 52, 66, 76; Le Mans, 66, 76;
Herpo, Duke, 48 Mainz, 93, 109, 125; Nantes, 53,
Hilarius, Bishop of Aries, 7 66, 76; Orleans, 57, 66, 76, 111;
Horse-breeding estates, 31, 78 Perigueux, 53, 61, 63, 66, 68, 71,
Horsemen, 11, 14-15, 19-20, 24, 76; Poitiers, 52, 53, 57, 60, 66, 71,
26-28, 58-60, 71, 111-112, 117- 76; Saintes, 53, 61, 66, 76;
122, 124, 126, 134-137 Saintois, 93, 109, 125; Toulouse,
Hostis Francorum, 110 53, 62, 63, 66, 68, 71, 76, 86;
Hostis VascanoTum, 111 Tours, 42-45, 47, 51-53, 57, 60,
66, 68, 76; Velay, 54, 66-67, 76
Imnachar, magnate, 28 Lex Salica, 14, 16, 137
Infantry, 27, 112, 114-115, 120-125 Liber Historiae Francorum, 8, 74, 7£
135, 138 Limoges, 28, 42, 47, 51, 57
Inferiores, 64, 71, 125, 126 Loches, 106
Innowales, Count, 93 Lodeve, 62
Isidore's continuator, 102-103 Lombards, 39^1, 55, 60-61, 86, 11*
Italy, 26, 27, 55, 60-61, 79, 86 Lupus, Duke, 47, 55
lussef ibn Abd ar Rahman, 105 Luxeuil, monastery at, 77-78
Lyons, 67
Justinian, Byzantine Emperor, 33
Maastricht, 67
Laeti, 5, 10, 14, 21, 25, 32, 33, 62, Mainz, 67. See also Levies
70-73, 78-SO, 124 Manaulf, Burgundian magnate, 95
Laffaux, battle at, 75
Landri, mayor of the palace, 74, 76, Mark theory, 120
77, 112 Marseilles, 54
Langres, 34, 79, 82 Martin, Duke, 97, 109
Le Mans, 66, 76. See also Levies Maurontus, magnate, 105
Leo, Byzantine Emperor, 16, 44 Meaux, 79
Lescar, 67 Medard, 51
Leudast, Count, 48-52, 79 Melun, 15, 50, 53
Leudegisel, Duke, 58-62, 71 Merovech, son of Chilperic, 46-49,
Leudes, 13, 30-31, 72, 77, 84-85, 52, 72, 137
89-92, 99, 104, 124 Merovech, son of Chlotar II, 76
Leudesius, magnate, 95—96, 111 Metz, 67, 82
Leutharius, Alaman Duke, 27, 89 Milan, 60
154
INDEX
Milites, 25, 33-34, 41, 50-51, 62, Quintianus, Bishop of Rodez, 7
71-73, 78-80, 88-89, 108, 124
Milituniae, 79 Rabanus Maurus, 136
Minor populus, 55-56, 71 Radbod, Duke of Frisia, 99-100
Mummolus, patrician, 38—41, 44, 47, Radulf, Duke of Thuringia, 92-94,
54-55, 59, 67 109
Munderic, Prankish magnate, 20-21, Ragamfred, mayor of the palace, 99-
29 101
Muslims, 101-102, 118 Ragamund, magnate, 78
Ragnachar, 4, 9, 13, 90
Naix, 82 Ragnovald, Duke, 53
Nantes, 11, 64, 78-79. See also Rauching, Duke, 65, 72
Levies Reccared, King of the Visigoths, 61-
Narbonne, 101, 105 62
Narses, 27 Reguli, 3, 6, 8, 10, 13, 24
Naval forces, 4, 18-20, 34, 38, 89, Remigius, Bishop of Rheims, 7—8, 14
108, 111, 128 Rennes, 10
Rheims, 5, 29, 36, 55, 75
Neustria, 66, 69, 74, 77, 83, 85, 97 Riccar, 13
Nevers, 67, 78 Rignomer, 13
Nicetius, Duke, 62, 67 Rigunth, 57
Nimes, 61, 62, 101 Ripuarian Franks, 137
Nobiliores, 87 Ripuarian Law, 115, 137
Notitia Dignttatum, 14, 21 Roccolen, Count, 46
Rodan, Lombard Duke, 40
Odilo, Bavarian Duke, 106-107 Rodez, 11-12
Olo, Duke, 60 Roman soldiers, 3, 10
Orange, 62 Romani, 79, 106, 111
Orleans, 10, 77-78. See also Levies Romania, 128
Ostrogoths, 12, 131 Rouen, 46
Otto, Prankish magnate, 92
Sagittarius, Bishop of Gap, 60
Paris, 4-5, 17, 29, 51, 53, 75, 77-79, St. Boniface, 98
127 Saint-More, 5
Pauperes, 64, 71, 125-126 Saintes, 12, 47, 85. See also Levies
Peppin I, 92 Saintois, 93, 109, 125. See also Levies
Peppin II, 97-98, 109-110 Salmaise, 34
Peppin III, 101, 108-111, 122, 126 Samh, -al, 101
Perigueux, 53, 57, 85. See also Levies Samo, 86
Pisaurum, battle of, 27 Saragossa, 26, 86
Poitiers, 11, 28, 38-39, 42, 49-51, Sarmatians, 5, 12, 17, 34
57-58, 67, 112: battle of, 117; Satellites, 99, 104
Church of St. Hilary at, 49-50, Saxons, 15, 28-29, 32, 36, 41, 82-
101. See also Levies 87, 101, 105, 108, 124, 127: of
Potentiates, 126 Bayeux, 10, 15, 52, 63, 71; in
Praetextatus, Bishop of Rouen, 48 Italy, 39
Procopius, 26, 79, 113-114: on Scapthar, magnate, 28
Prankish warfare, 131-136; eval- Scara, 81, 87-88, 109
uation of, 137-138 Scarfa, 78
Protadius, mayor of the palace, 77 Seltz, 81
Pueri, 32, 38, 46, 50-52, 57, 64-65, Seniores, 87
72-73, 85, 97, 99, 124 Senlis, 5
Pussy, 79 Septimania, 12, 61, 63, 68, 71
155
MEROVINGIAN MILITARY ORGANIZATION
Sermaise, 5 Thaumastus, Gallo-Roman magnate,
Sermiers, 5 23
Sermoise, 5 Theodore, Bishop of Marseilles, 54
Sicambri, 14, 116, 136 Theodoric the Great, 10
Sidonius Apollinaris, Gallo-Roman Therouanne, 48-49
magnate, 10, 23, 133 Theudebald, Alaman Duke, 107-108,
Siege engines, 9, 17, 59, 60 111
Siege of: Angouleme, 17; Aries, 12, Theudebald I, King, 26, 35, 88-89
17; Avignon, 9, 17, 55, 105, 111, Theudebert, son of Chilperic, 42, 45
127; Bellinzona, 60-61; Bourges, Theudebert I, King, 18-19, 22, 25-
53; Carcassonne, 17, 101; Chalons, 27, 30-35, 85, 88, 133
29; Chastel-Marlhac, 20; Cler- Theudebert II, King, 75-84, 90
mont, 37-38; Narbonne, 101, 105; Theuderic I, King, 11, 18, 21-22,
Nimes, 101; Paris, 4, 17, 129; 31-33, 44, 79, 85, 112, 136
Saragossa, 26; Toulouse, 101; Ver- Theuderic II, King, 75-84, 89-90
dun, 4, 17; Vitry, 21; Vollore, 20- Theuderic IV, King, 96, 111
21; Wogastisburg, 90 Theudoald, Count, 79
Siggo, magnate, 47 Theudoald, mayor of the palace, 99
Sighar, magnate, 38 Thuringians, 3, 5, 19, 31-32, 75, 82-
Sigibert, regulus, 12 83, 135
Sigibert I, King, 46, 47, 48, 50, 82: Tiberius, Byzantine Emperor, 54
and bella civilia, 36-39, 41-42; Titus, Gallo-Roman magnate, 16, 44
death of, 43, 45, 56; fighting Tolbiac, battle of, 6, 8
forces of, 43, 45, 88; problems Toul, 67: battle of, 82
with magnates, 44, 65, 72 Toulouse, 4, 12, 57, 61, 63, 85, 101.
Sigibert II, King, 92-93, 97 See also Levies
Sigila, magnate, 43 Tournai, 3-4, 14
Sigismir, Burgundian prince, 24 Tours, 38-39, 48-52, 67, 80: Church
Sigivald, Frankish magnate, 21, 30— of Saint Martin at, 64-68. See also
31,44 Levies
Sigulf, magnate, 42-43, 46, 48 Tribuni, 34, 51, 78-80
Sisenand, King of the Visigoths, 86 Tntstis, 13, 124
Socii, 24, 52, 55, 95, 97, 99, 105,
109-110 Ukba ibn al-Hadjdjadj, 105
Sodales, 97, 99, 110 Uro, 92
Soissons, 36, 45, 46-47, 74-75: arms Ursio, Frankish magnate, 55, 65
factory at, 4; kingdom of Romans Uzes, 67
at, 3, 5
Spain, 54, 57, 86 Valence, 40, 67
Spire, 67 Valentinus, Gallo-Roman magnate,
Sportulae praetoriani, 23 34
Stipendia paludatis, 23-24 Vassals, 120
Strasbourg, 67 Velay, 54, 66-67, 76
Sulpicius Alexander, 134 Venerandus, Duke, 86
Superiores, 74 Verdun, 4, 17, 67
Syagrius, 3-4, 8, 30 Verus, Bishop of Tours, 7
Syagrius, Gallo-Roman magnate, 30- Vienne, 9, 24
31 Viri fortes, 52
Syrivald, Frankish magnate, 30 Visigoths, 3, 7, 10-12, 16, 23, 103,
136
Tacitus, 116 Vitry, 21
Taifals, 12, 17, 29, 33, 36, 44, 124 Vollore, 20-21
Technical determinism, 119 Volusianus, Bishop of Tours, 7
156
INDEX
Vouille, battle of, 11 Willebad, patrician, 85, 87, 94-95,
109
Waldebert, 84 Wintrio, Duke, 60, 74-75, 89
Wandelbert, magnate, 95 Wiomad, 4
Waratto, mayor of the palace, 98 Wogastisburg, 86, 90
Warnachar, mayor of the palace, 83, Worms, 67
84 Wulfoald, Duke, 95, 97
Waroch, Breton count, 53
Wends, 87, 108, 127 Zaban, Lombard Duke, 40
Wilfrith, Bishop of York, 96, 109 Zulpich, 67: battle at, 82
157