A little known critical battle in 732

Dinosaur

Rational Skeptic
Valued Senior Member
The Arabs had taken over North Africa, Spain, & Turkey by 700 AD.

They started to invade the rest of Europe in 732. Charlemagne's grandfather, Charles Martel had the only army in Europe capable of stopping them, which he did in 732 south of Tours, France. Only students of European history are aware of this battle.

Martel was a description meaning hammer rather than a name. He was given that name because, he did not accept surrender when he had beaten an opposing army. He pursued the Arabs back into Spain, killing as many as he could before returning to France due to lack of supplies.

His activity demoralized the Arabs who never again tried to invade Europe. A date in 1492 is commemorated in Spain because it is the date on which Grenada (last city held by Arabs) was returned to Spanish control.
 
The Arabs had taken over North Africa, Spain, & Turkey by 700 AD.

They started to invade the rest of Europe in 732. Charlemagne's grandfather, Charles Martel had the only army in Europe capable of stopping them, which he did in 732 south of Tours, France. Only students of European history are aware of this battle.

Martel was a description meaning hammer rather than a name. He was given that name because, he did not accept surrender when he had beaten an opposing army. He pursued the Arabs back into Spain, killing as many as he could before returning to France due to lack of supplies.

His activity demoralized the Arabs who never again tried to invade Europe. A date in 1492 is commemorated in Spain because it is the date on which Grenada (last city held by Arabs) was returned to Spanish control.

Does this mean you think Spain doesn't count as Europe? :wink: The Arabs held onto a large part of Spain (Al Andalus) for several hundred years after this battle. It is true that after this battle Christendom progressively reconquered the Iberian peninsula, but it took them half a millennium.

I think it is worth noting that Europe lost a lot when the Arab rulers were pushed out. Arab rule at that time was far more tolerant and encouraging of intellectual enquiry than the Christian regimes that replaced it.
 
The Arabs had taken over North Africa, Spain, & Turkey by 700 AD.

They started to invade the rest of Europe in 732. Charlemagne's grandfather, Charles Martel had the only army in Europe capable of stopping them, which he did in 732 south of Tours, France. Only students of European history are aware of this battle.

Martel was a description meaning hammer rather than a name. He was given that name because, he did not accept surrender when he had beaten an opposing army. He pursued the Arabs back into Spain, killing as many as he could before returning to France due to lack of supplies.

His activity demoralized the Arabs who never again tried to invade Europe. A date in 1492 is commemorated in Spain because it is the date on which Grenada (last city held by Arabs) was returned to Spanish control.
Why do you think it is little known? Any student of history would be well aware of it.
 
Mod Note

(1221-1284) - Christian

The Spanish king of Castile and Len from 1252–1284. Known as Alfonso the Wise (or "Learned"), or el Sabio, he was the son and successor of Ferdinand III. He continued the conquests of Muslim territories in Al-Andalus, and took the city of Cá¡diz in 1262. His mother, Beatriz, was daughter of German King Philip of Swabia. He aspired to become Holy Roman Emperor and engaged in continental royal maneuverings to that end. Papal opposition and Spanish rejection ended that ambition.

The first stage of the conquest started with the capture of the cities of Çimpe (Tzympe) in 1352 and Gelibolu (Gallipoli) in 1354. By 1402, the eastern part of the peninsula—Thrace (1366), Macedonia (1371), Bulgaria (1394), Thessaly (1399) and parts of Serbia and Epirus—were part of the Ottoman state. In the second stage of the conquest, the rest of the Balkan peninsula was subjugated—Constantinople (1453), Serbia (1459), southern and central Bosnia (1463), the Morea (1464), Herzegovina (1465) and Albania (1467). Some peripheral areas, however, did not come under Ottoman rule until later—a small part of Herzegovina (1483), the coastal area of Albania (1497), Montenegro (1499), Belgrade (1521), northern Bosnia (1520– 1528), and Croatia (1527). A small part of Montenegro, the citystate of Ragusa (Dubrovnik) and the Adriatic coast of Dalmatia were the only Balkan areas to retain independence after the middle of the sixteenth century.
Can you cite the sources you pulled those two paragraphs from, timojin?

Because I know you copied and pasted them from two different sources. Please link them. Failure to provide a source for what you quoted, will be deemed to be plagiarism and you will be moderated.

One other thing, it is polite and expected that you inform readers that you are quoting other people, by either using quotation marks or using the quote feature provided on this site.

:::Edit to add:::

Links the two paragraphs that were plariarised from by timojin:

Paragraph 1: http://www.islamicspain.tv/Andalusi-Society/Key-Figures.htm

Paragraph 2: http://www.bosniafacts.info/early-history/40-conversion-to-islam-in-the-balkans
 
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Seems like he does this regularly... To be honest, I'm not totally convinced timojin knows what the phrases "cite the sources" and "plagiarism" actually are. Or is it all just an act?

Out of curiosity, where did his post fit in the thread? What post number?
 
This history needs to be reminded, to prevent from repeating the same mistakes.
Well, it's equally important that we not cherry pick our way through history. If we only remember the parts that we like and forget the parts we don't like, we are just setting ourselves up for failure.
 
Seems like he does this regularly... To be honest, I'm not totally convinced timojin knows what the phrases "cite the sources" and "plagiarism" actually are. Or is it all just an act?

Out of curiosity, where did his post fit in the thread? What post number?
Was the first one after the OP.
 
From Mathman Post #3
Why do you think it is little known? Any student of history would be well aware of it.
By student of history I assume you mean a person who took more than the typical courses in History taken by those who did not major in history or related subjects.

I went to private schools from first grade through college, but did not major in history. I took courses in ancient history, European history, & American history. I was unaware of the Charles Martel battle with the Arabs in 732 & was unaware of the Arab control of Spain in the era a few centuries prior to & after that battle.

I was an avid reader of Asimov SciFi & science essays. After graduating from college, I became aware of his historical essays & learned of the 732 battle & various other historical events not covered in courses taken by non-history majors.
 
From Mathman Post #3By student of history I assume you mean a person who took more than the typical courses in History taken by those who did not major in history or related subjects.

I went to private schools from first grade through college, but did not major in history. I took courses in ancient history, European history, & American history. I was unaware of the Charles Martel battle with the Arabs in 732 & was unaware of the Arab control of Spain in the era a few centuries prior to & after that battle.

I was an avid reader of Asimov SciFi & science essays. After graduating from college, I became aware of his historical essays & learned of the 732 battle & various other historical events not covered in courses taken by non-history majors.

Suppose it depends what one takes "little-known" to mean. As far as most Arts graduates are concerned, Schroedinger's equation would be "little-known". But any physical science graduate who did not know it would be considered pretty ignorant.

In this case I expect the Battle of Tours is far better known in Europe than in the USA, though it will not be as well known among the populace as Waterloo, for instance.

As a matter of fact, there was another battle that halted muslim expansion, at the other end of Europe, much later: the Battle of Vienna, 1683, fought against the Ottomans. :smile:
 
Something I learned from the newspaper today is that two years ago, the government of Spain passed a law whereby descendents of the Jews who were expelled from Spain in the c.15th are now entitled to have a second, Spanish, passport, if they so desire.

A rather fine gesture, I thought.
 
Something I learned from the newspaper today is that two years ago, the government of Spain passed a law whereby descendents of the Jews who were expelled from Spain in the c.15th are now entitled to have a second, Spanish, passport, if they so desire.

A rather fine gesture, I thought.

That was in the Spanish news a couple of years ago - what they didn't seem to address was how any of these descendants would be able to prove their entitlement.
 
From ExChemist Post 2
Does this mean you think Spain doesn't count as Europe?
Sorry for the phrasing of my remarks. Of course I consider Spain & Portugal part of Europe.
 
Seems like he does this regularly... To be honest, I'm not totally convinced timojin knows what the phrases "cite the sources" and "plagiarism" actually are. Or is it all just an act?

Out of curiosity, where did his post fit in the thread? What post number?

Why don't you as your mother Bells She just maliciously posted from other forum in order to ban me.
 
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