Charlemagne: Inherit, Conquer, Scale Up (768–814) · EARLY MIDDLE AGES
Frankish intervention south of the Pyrenees is less a “crusade” than a frontier strategy. Charlemagne seeks to secure southern Aquitaine and influence the balances of the Iberian Peninsula.
In 777, Charlemagne receives envoys from Muslim governors in rebellion against Cordoba. Cooperation is considered around Zaragoza: this is alliance politics more than a clash of civilisations.
In 778, the expedition ends in failure: Zaragoza does not open as expected and the Franks retreat. Crossing the Pyrenees leads to the ambush of Roncevaux, where the rearguard is struck by mountain fighters (often associated with the Vascones). The event is later amplified by epic memory around Roland.
After 778, expansion proceeds mainly through local leaders (counts and chiefs in Aquitaine). Gradually, several territories pass under Frankish influence and form the Spanish March: a military and administrative buffer south of the Pyrenees.