Pepin of Herstal: Prince of the Franks (687–714) · EARLY MIDDLE AGES
In Pepin of Herstal’s policy, Frisia is not just a military frontier: it is an economic lock. The Lower Rhine and the Rhine–Meuse estuaries command trade, tolls, and river routes.
Around 689, Pepin fights the Frisian king Radbod I in the region of Dorestad (Wijk bij Duurstede), on the Rhine. The victory does not mean that all Frisia is definitively subdued, but it allows the Franks to establish themselves in western Frisia and install political relays.
Pepin’s most lasting idea is to combine:
Pepin supports the Anglo-Saxon missionary Willibrord. With Frankish backing and papal approval, Willibrord can structure a durable mission and establish an ecclesiastical hierarchy. Utrecht becomes a key anchor: an episcopal and missionary centre materialising Frankish implantation.
This method — conquer, then consolidate through administration and the Church — will inspire later generations up to the Carolingian era.