10 October 732 A.D. HAMMER STRATEGY:
Charles Martel Hammers Islamo-Jihadi-Fascists at Tours
Editors. “Battle of Tours.” Encyclopedia
Britannica. N.d. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/600883/Battle-of-Tours. Accessed 3 Oct 2014.
Battle
of Tours, also
called Battle of Poitiers , (October 732),
victory won by Charles Martel, the de facto ruler of the Frankish
kingdoms, over Muslim invaders from Spain. The battlefield cannot be exactly
located, but it was fought somewhere between Tours and Poitiers, in what is now west-central France.
ʿAbd-ar-Raḥmān, the Muslim governor of
Córdoba,
had invaded Aquitaine (present southwestern France) and defeated its duke, Eudes. Eudes appealed for help to Charles, who
stationed his forces to defend the city of Tours from the northward progress of
the Muslims. According to tradition, the Muslim cavalry attacks broke upon
Charles’s massed infantry, and after ʿAbd-ar-Raḥmān was killed in the
fighting, the Arabs retired southward. There were no further Muslim invasions
of Frankish territory, and Charles’s victory has often been regarded as
decisive for world history, since it preserved western Europe from Muslim
conquest and Islāmization. The victory also served to consolidate Charles’s
leadership of the Franks, and he was able to assert his authority in Aquitaine,
where Eudes swore allegiance to him.
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