Charles Martel: Ruling Without a Crown (714–741) · EARLY MIDDLE AGES
The battle known as Poitiers (sometimes Tours) in 732 is one of the most famous episodes of the Early Middle Ages. It pits Charles Martel’s forces against an expedition led by the wali of al‑Andalus, ʿAbd al‑Rahman al‑Ghafiqi. It strengthens Charles’s position and later becomes a symbol reused across centuries.
In the early 8th century, the conquest of al‑Andalus (from 711) reshapes the political map of the West. North of the Pyrenees, Umayyad presence takes root in Narbonese Gaul (Septimania) and creates a frontier made of incursions, sieges, and local alliances.
Duke Eudes (Odo) of Aquitaine plays a central role: he defeats an Umayyad army at Toulouse (721). Later tradition also reports attempts at local agreements (such as the episode of Munuza), showing survival politics in an unstable space.
In 732, a major expedition moves north and meets Charles’s forces and their allies somewhere between Tours and Poitiers, on a site whose exact location is still debated.
The battle, traditionally dated to October 732, ends with the withdrawal of the Andalusi expedition and the death of ʿAbd al‑Rahman during the fighting. For Charles, it is a political success: he appears as a military leader able to rally beyond Austrasia.
But one must distinguish:
This gap explains why Poitiers is both a real battle and a political symbol reused over time.