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Battle of Roncevaux Pass - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Battle of Roncevaux Pass

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Battle of Roncevaux Pass
Part of Charlemagne's campaign in the Iberian Peninsula

The death of Roland at the Battle of Roncevaux, from an illustrated manuscript, 1455–1460
Date August 15, 778
Location Roncevaux Pass in the Pyrenees
Result Basque victory
Belligerents
Franks Basques
Commanders
Charlemagne
Roland†, Eginhard, Anselmus
Unknown
(speculated: Duke Lop of Vasconia)
Strength
Major army Unknown (guerrilla party)
Casualties and losses
Massacre of the Frankish rearguard but safety for the main force Unknown
History of the Basque people
Prehistory and Antiquity
Basque Prehistory
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Duchy of Vasconia
County of Vasconia
Battle of Roncevaux Pass
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Banu Qasi
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ETA
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Kings of Pamplona and Navarre
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The Battle of Roncevaux Pass (French and English spelling, Roncesvalles in Spanish, Orreaga in Basque) was a famous battle in 778 in which Hruodland (Roland), prefect of the Brittany March, was defeated by the Basques. It was fought at Roncevaux Pass, a high mountain pass in the Pyrenees on the border between France and Spain (approximate location: 42°59′22″N, 1°20′02″W).

Contents

[edit] Background

After the Muslim invasion of 711 and the rise of the Carolingians, the Duchy of Vasconia and Aquitaine had been severely punished by both sides. The last double Duke, Waifer, had been defeated by Pepin the Short and the Frankish domain north of the Pyrenees seemed consolidated.

[edit] The plot

Sulaiman Ibn Yakzan Ibn al-Arabi, wali of Barcelona and Girona, had been present at the Court meeting of Paderborn in 777. It seems it was he who induced Charlemagne to invade Spain by promising him an easy surrender of the Upper March of Al Andalus. The King didn't make up his mind until the winter, but he finally decided to launch an expedition into Spain the next year.

The Franks advanced as two armies: one by the east (Catalonia) and another by the west (Basque Country). Charles himself took the command of the second army that crossed Vasconia and camped at Pamplona without apparent opposition.

Meanwhile in Zaragoza, the capital of the Upper March of Al Andalus, its governor Hussain Ibn Yahya al Ansari, apparently part of the pro-Frankish conspiracy, had to face other problems. The Emir of Cordoba had sent his most trusted general, Thalaba Ibn Obeid to take control of the possibly rebellious city and prevent the Frankish invasion. Al Ansari and Ibn Obeid clashed repeatedly; eventually the wali managed to defeat the Cordobese general and make him prisoner.

Reinforced in his autonomous position, al Ansari became reluctant to yield his new privileged status to the Frankish monarch. No matter what they might have previously negotiated, the gates of Zaragoza remained closed against the Christian army.

It is unclear if Charlemagne besieged Zaragoza. Whatever the case, the military pressure on the city could not have lasted much more than a month. This time was filled with negotiation that nevertheless did not result in the surrender of the city.

Both conspirators seem to have tried to appease Charlemagne by giving him the prisoner General Thalaba and a large tribute of gold, but Charlemagne was not easily satisfied, putting Suleiman al-Arabi in chains.

[edit] The retreat

As the Frankish army retreated towards Pamplona they suffered an ambush led by the relatives of al-Arabi. Suleiman al-Arabi was liberated and brought to Zaragoza, where both conspirators jointly resisted a new attack by Abd al-Rahman. Suleiman al-Arabi would eventually be murdered by al Ansari.

After stopping at Pamplona, Charlemagne ordered the walls of this strategic city be destroyed, possibly fearing that it could be used by the Basques in future rebellions. Some primary sources suggest that he destroyed the city altogether.

[edit] The Battle

The battle itself took place in the evening of Saturday, August 15th 778, causing numerous losses among the Frankish troops, including several most important aristocrats and the sack of the baggage, probably with all the gold given by the Muslims at Zaragoza. After their success, the attackers took advantage of the night to flee.

The sources are somewhat contradictory, yet the second redaction of the Annales Regii (falsely attributed to Eginhard) reads:[1]

Having decided to return, [Charlemagne] entered the mountains of the Pyrenees, in whose summits the Vascones had set up an ambush. When attacking the rearguard confusion spread by all the army. And, while Frankish were superior to the Vascones both in armament as in courage, the roughness of the terrain and the difference in the style of combat made them inferior. In this battle were killed the majority of the paladins that the King had placed in command of his forces. The bagagge was sacked and, suddenly, the enemy vanished thanks to their knowledge of the terrain. The memory of the injury so produced darkened in great manner in the King's heart that of the feats made in Hispania.

The Vita Karoli mentions the names of the most important paladins killed among many others: Eggihard, Mayor of the Palace, Anselmus, Palatine Count and Roland, Prefect of the March of Brittany[2].

[edit] The Basque army

The guerrilla army of the Basques is not well known. A later source, the anonymous Saxon Poet talks of the Basque spears, which fits with the Pyrenean and Basque tradition that would be present much later among the almogavars. Such typical mountain warrior would have two short spears and a knife or short sword as main weapons, not using armour normally.

Pierre de Marca, a Bearnese author, suggests that the attackers were a reduced number of mostly local Low Navarrese, Souletines and Bazatanese, whose main motivation may well have been plunder. Nevertheless he also suggests that the Duke of Vasconia, Lop may have been their commander.[3] This opinion is also held by the authors of the General History of Languedoc who claim that Duke Lop was the leader of the Gascons that attacked Charlemagne.[4]

The presence of people from other areas beyond those mentioned by de Marca is very likely anyhow. It is difficult to imagine why Bazatanese were there and not, for instance, the people of nearby Aezkoa or Salazar valleys. There are even attributions to Guipuscoans, like a dedication in a chapel of Pasaia that gives thanks to Our Lady of Piety because of her support to their alleged participation in this battle. Nevertheless the date mentioned (814) may refer to the Second Battle of Roncevaux (see below).

[edit] Location

Ibaineta (Roncevaux) pass
Ibaineta (Roncevaux) pass

There have been many different hypotheses as to where this battle actually took place, some suggesting various places in the High Pyrenees in Aragon or Catalonia.

The mainstream opinion is that the battle took place somewhere not far from Roncevaux itself as it is not just one of the easiest routes but also traditional.

Notably the old Roman road (also called Route of Napoleon) followed a different route than the modern one, not crossing Ibaineta (the traditional location) but heading eastwards and crossing instead the Lepoeder and Bentartea passes, not far from Urkuilu peak, at Aezkoa. It might well have been at one of these narrow passages where the actual battle took place.[5]

[edit] Consequences

The Franks failed in capturing Zaragoza and suffered significant losses at the hands of the Basques. They would only be able to establish the Marca Hispanica a decade later, when Barcelona was finally captured. Zaragoza remained an important Muslim city, capital of the Upper March and later of an independent emirate, until the 11th century.

Defenceless Pamplona was captured by the Muslims soon after and held by them for some years, until in 798-801 a rebellion expelled them as well and helped to consolidate the Banu Qasi realm and eventually the constitution of the independent Kingdom of Pamplona in 824.

[edit] Legend

Over the years, this battle was romanticized by oral tradition into a major conflict between Christians and Muslims, when in fact both sides in the battle were Christian. In the tradition, the Basques are replaced by a force of 400,000 Saracens. (Charlemagne did fight the Saracens in Iberia, though not in the Pyrenees.) The Song of Roland, which commemorates the battle, was written by an unknown troubadour of the 11th century. It is the earliest surviving of the chansons de geste or epic poems of medieval France in the northern dialect or langue d'oïl of what became the French language. There is a tombstone near the Roncevaux Pass commemorating the area where it is traditionally held that Roland died.

There is an alternate medieval Iberian legend involving Bernardo del Carpio, a medieval Leonese hero, whom some stories hold to be the vanquisher of Roland at Roncevaux.

[edit] Second and Third battles of Roncevaux

In the year 812 there was a second Battle in the same pass, that ended in stalemate due to the greater precautions taken by the Franks.

In the year 824 was the maybe more important Third Battle of Roncevaux, where counts Eblus and Aznar, Frankish vassals, were captured by the joint forces of Pamplona and the Banu Qasi, consolidating the independence of both Basque realms.[6]

[edit] Value for comparative history

In the case of the Battle of Roncevaux, historians possess both the description of an event by contemporary and fairly reliable sources and the depiction of the same event resulting from centuries of an oral tradition, in which it was magnified to epic proportions and changed almost unrecognizably.

The ability here to compare both accounts, and trace how an actual historical event is transformed into myth, is useful for the study of other events of which the only existing account is one deriving from centuries of oral tradition, and in which historians need to try to reconstruct the actual historical facts and separate them from later myth (for example, Homer's depiction of the Trojan War or the Biblical account of the Exodus).

[edit] In popular culture

The battle is referenced to in the chorus of Týr's song The Edge on their 2004 album Eric the Red also refered to in Ernest Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Narbaitz, Pierre. Orria, o la batall de Roncesvalles. 778. Elkar, 1979. ISBN 84-400-4926-9
  2. ^ Thorpe, Lewis Two Lives Of Charlemagne ISBN 0-140-44213-8
  3. ^ Pierre de Marca, Historie du Béarn (quoted by Narbaitz, op.cit.)
  4. ^ Devic and Vaissette, Historie Genérale du Languedoc, 1872 (quoted by Narbaitz, op.cit.)
  5. ^ Narbaitz, op. cit.
  6. ^ Ducado de Vasconia (Auñamendi Encyclopedia)

[edit] Bibliography

  • Narbaitz, Pierre. Orria, o la batalla de Roncesvalles. 778. Elkar argitaldaria, 1979. ISBN 84-400-4926-9

[edit] External links


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