Fraxinetum
Substate | Defunct
887 CE to 972 CE
Fraxinetum or Fraxinet (Arabic: فرخشنيط, romanized: Farakhshanīt or فرخشة Farakhsha, from Latin fraxinus: "ash tree", fraxinetum: "ash forest") was the site of a Muslim stronghold at the center of a frontier state in Provence between about 887 and 972. It is identified with modern La Garde-Freinet, near Saint-Tropez. The fortress was established by Muslims from al-Andalus. From this base, the Muslims raided up the Rhône Valley, into Piedmont and as far as the Abbey of Saint Gall. Their main business was slave-raiding of Europeans for export to Islamic markets. For a time, they controlled the passes through the western Alps. They withstood several attempts to oust them, but were finally defeated by the combined forces of the Provençal and Piedmontese nobility at the battle of Tourtour in 972.
Related Events
Showing 2 events out of 2 total
Mediterranean West Europe (820 – 963 CE): Carolingian Lotharingia, Early Provence, and Rhone–Mediterranean Trade
Geographic and Environmental Context
Mediterranean West Europe includes southern France (from the Rhône valley to the Pyrenees, including Languedoc, Provence, and Roussillon), Monaco, Corsica, Lyon, and the southern Jura.
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Anchors: the Rhône Valley (Lyon–Avignon–Arles–Marseille), the southern Jura gateways to Burgundy and Helvetia, the Provençal littoral (Nice, Toulon, Avignon, Marseille), the Languedoc plain (Narbonne, Carcassonne, Montpellier), the Roussillon/Catalan marches (Perpignan, Pyrenean passes to Aragon/Andorra), Corsica in the Tyrrhenian, and Monaco as a fortified seigneurial port.
Climate and Environmental Shifts
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The early Medieval Warm Period improved cereal yields and vineyard productivity.
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The Rhône valley and Languedoc plain supported olives, vines, and wheat; Jura uplands supported cattle and dairying.
Societies and Political Developments
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After the Treaty of Verdun (843), much of the Rhône–Provence–Languedoc fell into Middle Francia (Lothair’s realm), later fragmenting into Burgundian and Provençal polities.
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County of Provence consolidated around Arles and Marseille.
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Septimania/Languedoc: local counts balanced between Frankish kings and Umayyad/Andalusian influence from across the Pyrenees.
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Corsica: contested between local lords and Saracen raids.
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Lyon emerged as an ecclesiastical center and a nodal point in Carolingian administration.
Economy and Trade
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Rhone trade: wine, salt, and grain moved downstream to Arles and Marseille; luxury goods and silks from Italy passed upriver toward Lyon.
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Agriculture: wheat, olives, and vines in Provence/Languedoc; cattle and cheese in Jura.
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Corsica provided timber and pasturage.
Belief and Symbolism
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Christianity anchored in monastic reform (Cluniac currents rising in the Jura).
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Episcopal sees (Lyon, Arles, Narbonne) supervised cultural continuity.
Long-Term Significance
By 963, Mediterranean West Europe was a frontier zone of Carolingian heirs, with Rhône–Provençal commerce, Languedoc counts, and Corsican raiding setting the stage for 11th-century growth.
West Europe (820 – 963 CE): Carolingian Fragmentation, Monastic Renewal, and the Birth of Normandy
Geographic and Environmental Context
West Europe in this age stretched from the Rhône and Languedoc plains to the Loire and Seine valleys, the Channel coasts, and the Low Countries, forming the western heartlands of the former Carolingian Empire.
Two major subregions framed its geography:
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Mediterranean West Europe—the Rhône valley, Provence, Languedoc, and Roussillon, connecting Burgundy and the Frankish interior to the western Mediterranean and Pyrenees.
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Atlantic West Europe—northern France and the Low Countries, dominated by the Seine, Loire, and Scheldt basins opening to the Channel and North Sea.
From the Alpine passes and Jura uplands to the Breton headlands, river systems underpinned trade and defense, while the onset of the Medieval Warm Period after c. 950 lengthened growing seasons and expanded viticulture and grain production.
Societies and Political Developments
Mediterranean West Europe: Provençal Polities and the Rhone Corridor
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After the Treaty of Verdun (843), the Rhône–Provence–Languedoc belt entered Middle Francia (Lothair’s realm), later fragmenting into Burgundian and Provençal spheres.
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The County of Provence centered on Arles and Marseille; Septimania (Languedoc) balanced between Frankish and Andalusian influence across the Pyrenees.
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Corsica remained semi-autonomous but suffered frequent Saracen raids; Monaco and coastal towns fortified themselves under local lords.
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Lyon served as an ecclesiastical and Carolingian administrative hub, mediating Burgundy’s ties to the Mediterranean.
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Regional counts in Narbonne, Carcassonne, and Montpellier asserted practical independence, forming the political seedbed of later Occitan culture.
Atlantic West Europe: Carolingian Successors and Viking Frontiers
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Carolingian fragmentation (843–888) divided the western realm into West Francia, Burgundy, and Lotharingia.
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Paris emerged as a fortified bastion against Viking fleets, who exploited navigable rivers—Seine, Loire, Scheldt—to plunder Rouen, Nantes, Tours, and Ghent.
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The Treaty of Saint-Clair-sur-Epte (911) created the Duchy of Normandy under the Viking leader Rollo, securing coastal settlement and Christian conversion.
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Flanders developed as a fortified marcher county, mediating between West Francia and Lotharingia, while Brittany alternated between independence and Frankish pressure.
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In the Loire basin, regional counts (Anjou, Blois, Poitiers) consolidated territories that would later define the Capetian and Angevin worlds.
Economy and Trade
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Agriculture:
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Provence & Languedoc: olives, vines, wheat, and cattle; terraces and irrigation along the Rhône.
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Northern France & Flanders: cereals, flax, and wool; viticulture on the Loire and Seine; cattle and dairying in Flanders and the Jura.
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Rhone–Mediterranean trade: wine, salt, and grain moved downriver to Arles and Marseille; silks and spices from Italy moved upriver to Lyon and Burgundy.
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Atlantic markets: Channel fisheries, salt pans, and wool processing in Flanders; Scheldt trade linked to the Rhine–Meuse.
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Ports and routes:
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Marseille, Narbonne, Arles connected inland Gaul to the Mediterranean.
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Rouen, Nantes, and Bruges became northern entrepôts for textiles, salt, and grain.
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Monetization: Carolingian deniers remained the standard; regional mints in Lyon, Tours, and Rouen circulated silver coins that tied seigneurial economies to long-distance trade.
Subsistence and Technology
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Cereal expansion: heavy plow adoption on the loess soils of the Seine–Loire basins.
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Viticulture: Rhone, Burgundy, and Loire slopes terraced for wine; barrels and presses standardized storage.
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Maritime and river transport: flat-bottomed boats and clinker-built vessels navigated river–sea transitions.
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Defensive architecture: wooden motte-and-bailey prototypes appeared by the 10th century; stone keeps in Provence and Narbonne guarded trade routes.
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Monastic estates integrated mills, vineyards, and waterworks, providing food security and technical innovation.
Movement and Interaction Corridors
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Rhône corridor: Burgundy ⇄ Provence ⇄ Mediterranean ports.
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Loire & Seine rivers: arteries of Carolingian and Viking-era commerce; connected Paris and Tours to the Atlantic.
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Via Domitia: Roman road linking Nîmes, Narbonne, and the Pyrenees.
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Scheldt–Rhine–Meuse delta: network joining Flanders to the Rhineland and North Sea markets.
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Pyrenean passes: opened communication between Roussillon and Aragon/Andorra, precursors to Catalan integration.
Belief and Symbolism
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Christianity and reform:
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Episcopal sees (Lyon, Arles, Narbonne, Reims, Tours) maintained Carolingian ecclesiastical continuity.
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Cluny Abbey (founded 910) in Burgundy initiated the monastic reform movement that revitalized European spirituality and discipline.
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Monastic patronage: monasteries in the Rhône–Saône–Loire triangle (Cluny, Tournus, Vézelay) and in Tourssafeguarded manuscripts and relics during Viking disruptions.
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Relic cults and pilgrimage: shrines at Tours (St. Martin), Chartres, and Reims drew pilgrims and royal patronage.
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Syncretism: Christian and regional traditions fused—Roman saints in Languedoc, local miracle cults in Burgundy, and re-sanctified pagan sites in Brittany and the Jura.
Adaptation and Resilience
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Political decentralization created flexible local governance: counts and bishops stabilized territories when kingship faltered.
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Riverine redundancy: when overland travel was unsafe, goods moved by river; when Vikings disrupted the Seine, the Loire or Rhône systems took up traffic.
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Maritime continuity: even during raids, coastal trade adapted through fortified ports and protected monastic harbors.
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Monastic organization and Cluniac discipline reasserted stability, literacy, and agrarian innovation.
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Agrarian diversification—grains, vines, livestock—buffered communities from climate and warfare shocks.
Long-Term Significance
By 963 CE, West Europe had reorganized itself around river valleys, fortified counties, and monastic centers:
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The Rhone–Provence corridor revived Mediterranean exchange under Burgundian and Provençal counts.
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The Seine–Loire heartland endured Viking assault and birthed Normandy, a hybrid duchy bridging Norse vigor and Frankish order.
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Flanders and Burgundy prospered as border economies balancing Latin and Germanic realms.
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The Cluniac reform radiated spiritual renewal from Burgundy across Europe.
These patterns—local lordship, monastic reform, fortified commerce, and riverine unity—defined the political and cultural rebirth that would propel West Europe into the high medieval age.