Video: Barbarians - The Franks
Summary:
In this fearsome instalment of ‘Barbarians’, we examine the Franks: a group
of Germanic peoples who conquered most of
Gaul,
Italy and Germany between the third and ninth centuries. The kingdom of the
western Franks became France; the kingdom of the eastern Franks became
Germany.
Firstly, we examine the ferocious figure of Merovius, the legendary Frankish
leader who was rumoured to be ‘half-man, half-monster’. He led the Salian Franks
during the fifth century; the
Merovingian dynasty was named after him. This legendary leader set the stage
for his sons’ enormous territorial conquests. His son,
Childeric I, triumphed militarily against the Visigoths, Saxons and Alemanni.
Childeric’s own son,
Clovis I, managed to unite most of Gaul under his control when he defeated
Syagrius, the Roman ruler of the area. He united the Salians with the Ripuarian
(eastern) Franks, and oversaw their
conversion to
Christianity. Clovis himself relinquished his vociferous paganism; he
allegedly believed that the
Christian god granted him greater battlefield success. His strategy was
apparently quite successful: he won the Battle of Tolbiac against the
Alemanni, and subjected the
Visigoth kingdom of Toulouse to a crushing and decisive defeat at the Battle
of Vouillé.
The agriculture of the Merovingian dynasty was far more advanced than that of
the Romans. Their introduction of the ‘three-field system’ was one of many
ingenious and modern innovations. Their dynasty lasted until the eighth century
when the
Carolingian dynasty was founded under Charlemagne. By the ninth century, the
kingdom of the western Franks was fused into a single people with the
Gallo-Romans; they spoke the modified form of Latin that became modern French.
Clovis’ role was fundamental in leading his people to complete power over the
land we now call
France, and building the
bridge between
barbarian and statesman that Charlemagne eventually embodied.