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              MOSLEMS AND FRANKS
                
              
              
                 
              
              CHARLES MARTEL AND THE RESCUE OF EUROPE FROM THE
                THREATENED YOKE OF THE SARACENS 
              BY 
              JOHN WEALE.
                
               
              
                 
               
              PART I. THE MOSLEMS.
                
               
              CHAPTER I. Life and doctrine of Mohammed 
                    
               
              II.—The Khalifate from Abu Bekr to Hesham
                    
               
              
                 
               
              PART II. THE FRANKS.
                
               
              CHAPTER I.—The Frank Confederacy.—Clovis, the Founder of the Frank
                Monarchy
                
               
              II.—Decline of the Merovingian Princes.—The Mayors of the Palace.—Pepin
                of Landen—Pepin of Heristal.
                — Charles Martel. —The Battle of Tours
                
               
              
                 
               
              PART 1.
                
               
              THE MOSLEMS.
                
               
              
                 
               
              CHAPTER I.
                
               
              Life and doctrine of Mohammed.
                
               
              
                 
               
              The principal nations of Arabia mentioned by the ancients, are, besides
                the Skenites (tent-dwellers, or wandering tribes),
                the Nabataeans, in Arabia Petraea (Hejaz); the Thamudites and Minaeans in Hejaz;
                the Sabaeans and Homerites,
                in Yemen; the Hadhramites, in Hadhramaut on the southern coast; the Omanites, Dacharenians, and gerrhaeans, in
                Oman and Ul-Ahsa, or Lahsa;
                the Saranians, in Neged; and
                the Saracens, an obscure tribe on the borders of Egypt, and remarkable only
                from the circumstance that, perhaps from a fallacious interpretation of the
                meaning of the word,—viz: as intended to indicate an
                Oriental situation—the application of the name has been gradually extended,
                first to the inhabitants of the Arabian peninsula generally, afterwards to all
                Mohammedans.
                
               
              The early history of the Arabians is shrouded in obscurity. That the Joctanites were not the true original inhabitants of the
                country, but simply later immigrants into it, would appear to result from the
                histories of the ancient Babylonian and Assyrian empires (however so little
                reliance we may feel inclined to place in these mythical and traditional
                histories); for we are told that Nimrod was attended by Arabian tribes—and in
                the list of the Babylonian kings we find six Arabian princes; and, again, among
                the auxiliaries of Ninus we find Arabs, under a
                prince named Ariaeus. The Hyksos, or Shepherd Kings,
                who are said to have invaded Egypt about 2075 BC, and to have held sway in that country during more than 600
                years, are also generally considered to have come from Arabia. The traditional
                history of Arabia mentions several kingdoms and dynasties. The two most ancient
                of these, dating their origin as far back as 2000 BC, were, (1), the Homebite kingdom in
                Yemen, which, after a time, split into the two states of Saba, or Sheba, and Hadhramaut. About 1572 BC,
                these were reunited into one empire, which about 1075 BC was governed by Balkis, the daughter
                of Hodhad, and who by some historians is thought to
                have been identical with the Queen of Sheba, the cotemporary of Solomon; (2),
                the State in Hejaz, in which the Nabataeans held superior sway.
                
               
              Protected on all sides by the seas of sand and water which encompass the
                peninsula, the Arabian people—or, at all events, the great body of the
                nation—had, at all times, escaped the yoke of a foreign conqueror. King Sesostris, of Egypt, is said to have subjected some tribes
                of Hejaz to his rule; but it would appear they speedily recovered their
                independence. All the attempts made at different times, by the rulers of
                Babylon, Assyria, Egypt, and Persia, to subjugate the Arabian peninsula, proved
                either altogether abortive, or, even where they partially succeeded, the
                conquest was only transient. Thus Arabia Petraea was
                subjugated, for a time, to the Assyrian sway in the eighth century BC by Pul, or Phul, and Sennacherib; but in the sixth century BC we find it in independent alliance
                with the Persian kings Cyrus and Cambyses. Alexander the Great had formed the
                plan to conquer and colonies the coasts of Arabia, and to prepare in this way
                the ultimate subjugation of the entire peninsula. The genius of the Graeco-Macedonian conqueror, the immense material means of
                which he could dispose, and the possession of a powerful fleet (under Nearchus)
                promised a successful issue to the intended expedition : the death of Alexander
                (11th June, 823 BC) averted the
                threatening danger. The attempt which Antigonus and
                Demetrius made upon Arabia in 312 BC was a failure; and the trifling conquest achieved in 219 BC by Antiochus the Great, of Syria, was speedily wrested again
                from him by the natives. At a later period, the northern tribes of Arabia were
                engaged for a time, with varying fortunes, in desultory feuds with the Jews
                under the Maccabeans, or Makkabi.
                The Romans also, that all-grasping nation, cast their covetous eyes upon the
                flourishing state of Petraea; but neither Scaurus nor Gabinius, neither Pompey nor Antony, nor even Augustus,
                could prevail against the difficulties of the country, and the stubborn valor
                of the roving tribes of the desert. Hunger, thirst, fatigue, and disease
                thinned the ranks of the proud legions more effectually still than the bow, the
                javelin, and the scimitar of the Bedouin; and after a last vain attempt under Aelius Gallus, Imperial Rome reluctantly relinquished for a
                time the coveted prize. In 106 AD,
                Cornelius Palma, a lieutenant of Trajan, conquered the cities of Bostra and Petra, and subdued the Nabataeans. Trajan made,
                also, some naval inroads, and carried his incursions as far as Katif. Petra lost from this time its importance and
                splendor; Bostra becoming in its stead the principal
                seat of the commerce of the Euphrates and the Tigris. After the death of
                Trajan, the conquered tribes shook off again the Roman yoke. The Emperor
                Aurelian broke, indeed, the power of the Nabataeans in his celebrated campaign
                against Zenobia, the great Queen of Palmyra (272 and
                273 AD), and his triumphal car was
                followed by captive Arabian chiefs; but the Nabataean nation, disdaining to bend to the Roman yoke, abandoned their homes, an fled to
                that great asylum of Arabian freedom, the desert.
                
               
              At the commencement of the sixth century, (502 AD) the Homerite kingdom of Yemen was
                conquered by an Ethiopian prince, the Negus, or King, of Abyssinia, and
                remained subject or tributary to the Christian princes of the latter country to
                the time of the conquest of Arabia by Chosroes I (Nushirvan)
                of Persia (about 574 AD). Still,
                though Arabia was styled a Persian province, the sway of the Sassanides over the peninsula was more nominal than real;
                the tribes of the desert remained free, and even in Yemen, we find seven
                Princes of the Homerites successfully asserting and
                maintaining the independence of their mountains.
                
               
              There is some reason to suppose that the original worship of the Arabs
                was that of one God; clouded and
                tarnished, indeed, by many superstitious usages, and perhaps even by human
                sacrifices, yet free from gross idolatry. But this primitive religion was
                speedily supplanted by the adoration of the Sun, the moon, and the fixed stars;
                a specious superstition which substitutes for the invisible, all-pervading,
                universal God, the most glorious of his creations, and may well find its excuse
                in the clear sky and boundless naked plains of Arabia, where the heavenly
                luminaries shine with a brighter lustre, displaying
                to the mind of the untutored son of the desert the visible image of a Deity.
                Intimately connected with this still primitive faith, was the belief in the
                wonderful powers and attributes of meteoric stones. The most renowned of these,
                called Hadjar-el-Aswad, is
                a square-shaped black stone, kept to the present day in Mecca in the Temple of
                the Kaaba, and which has from time immemorial been, and remains still, the
                sacred object of the devout pilgrimages and adoration of the Arabs of all
                tribes. The Kaaba is a square building, thirty-four feet high, and twenty-seven
                broad; built, according to the Mohammedan tradition, by Abraham, and repeatedly
                restored, in after ages, by the Amalekites, by the Jorhamites,
                by Kassa, of the tribe of Koreish, &c.; and the
                last time by Sultan Mustapha, in 1630. Of the original building there remains
                thus at present only a small portion of wall, which is held most sacred. A
                spacious portico encloses the quadrangle of the Kaaba. The holy stone, which is
                about four feet high, and set in silver, is fixed in the wall, in the southern
                corner. The Mohammedan tradition relates that this stone was brought to Abraham
                by the Angel Gabriel, whose tears over the sinfulness of man had changed its
                original white color to black! Hence Mahomet was induced to make it the Kebla of prayer, and to enjoin the pilgrimage of the
                faithful to it and the Kaaba. Verily, the idolatry of the ancient Arabs, who
                worshipped the divine power in the meteoric stone, that had fallen from the
                skies in a manner miraculous to their untutored understanding, was more
                natural, and even far more rational, than the present worship of the same stone,
                based upon this wretched and most absurd legend! The transmigration of souls,
                the resurrection of bodies, and the invocation of departed spirits, formed also
                part of the religious belief of the ancient Arabs; the cruel practice of human
                sacrifices prevailed among them even up to the time of Mohammed. In the course
                of time the grossest idolatry became an important, and, in the end, a
                preponderating ingredient in Arabian worship; and the sacred Kaaba was defiled
                by the gradual introduction of three hundred and sixty idols of men, eagles,
                lions, and antelopes; among which stood most conspicuous the most popular of
                them, the statue of Hobal, fashioned of red agate by
                a Syrian artist, and holding in his hand seven arrows, without heads or
                feathers, the instruments and symbols of profane divination. But, though each
                tribe, each family, nay every independent warrior, might freely create new
                idols and new rites of his fantastic worship, yet the nation, in every age, has
                bowed to the religion of Mecca, and to the superior sanctity of the Kaaba. An
                annual truce of two, or, according to some historians, four months, during
                which the swords of the Arabs were sheathed, both in foreign and domestic
                warfare, protected the holy pilgrimage to Mecca. The great fair held in connection
                with this pilgrimage induced those to come whom religious ardor failed to
                attract. This annual gathering of distant and hostile tribes contributed
                greatly to harmonize and refine the wild sons of the desert; the exchange of
                eloquence and poetry usual at these periods, could only heighten the humanizing
                and elevating influence of the custom. The fanaticism of the first Moslems
                abolished the fair, inflicting thereby one of the many evils that came in the
                train of Mohammed’s gigantic imposture. The rites which are, even in the
                present day, accomplished by the devout Moslems, are still the same they were
                in the days of the ancient idolaters of Arabia. “At a respectful distance from
                the temple, they threw off their garments; seven times they went round the
                Kaaba, with quick steps, kissing each time the holy stone with deep reverence;
                seven times they visited and adored the adjacent mountains; seven times they
                threw stones into the valley of Mina: and the pilgrimage was completed, as at
                the present hour, by a sacrifice of sheep and camels, and the burial of their
                hair and nails in the consecrated ground”.
                
               
              It will be readily understood that the custody of the Kaaba must at all
                times have proved a most lucrative affair. No wonder, then, that the
                neighboring tribes should have hotly contended for it. Originally the Ismaelites held it for a long time, together with the
                dominion over Mecca, which resulted from it as a natural consequence. The Johramites, a branch of the Joctanites,
                succeeded at last in ousting them from it; these again were expelled by the Knuzaites, who promoted idolatry to a most formidable
                extent. In the middle of the fifth century, an Ismaelitic tribe, that of Koreish, wrested the custody of the Kaaba, by fraud or force,
                from the Khuzaites. The sacerdotal office was
                entrusted by the Koreish to Cosa, of the family of
                the Hashemites, and devolved through four lineal descents to Abdol Motalleb the grand-father
                of Mohammed.
                
               
              The freedom which Arabia enjoyed, promised a safe asylum to the
                political and religious exiles and prescripts from the adjacent kingdoms. The
                intolerance of the Magian Persians had overturned the
                altars of Babylon, and compelled the votaries of Sabianism to seek a refuge in the desert. The same fate befell the Magians in their turn, when the sword of Alexander had overthrown the Persian monarchy.
                Multitudes of Jews fled into Arabia, to escape the cruel persecution of
                Antiochus Epiphanes, and greater numbers still followed during the wars of
                Titus and Hadrian. To all these were added, at a later period, numerous sects
                of Christians, fleeing from that worst of all persecutions, that of their
                triumphant co-religionists, from whom they might chance to differ in some
                abstruse point of doctrine, or in some immaterial rite. Among the persecuted
                sects, we may mention here more particularly the Marcionites and the Manichaeans, the Jacobites and Nestorians.
                The latter two sects had gained many proselytes in Yemen, and succeeded even in
                converting the princes of Hira and Gassan to their faith. The Jews, also, had made numerous
                and important converts to the Mosaic belief; and we have already seen how the
                intolerant zeal of a bigoted Jewish neophyte, Dunaan,
                prince of the Homerites, suddenly interrupted the
                enjoyment of that absolute liberty of conscience which the Arabian idolaters
                had hitherto granted to all creeds and all sects, and brought down upon Yemen
                an Abyssinian invasion to avenge the wrongs of the persecuted Christians.
                
               
              It was in this country, and among this people, so strangely and peculiarly
                constituted, that arose the apostle of a new faith, destined to knead the
                heterogeneous and hostile elements of the nation into one compact mass, and to
                hurl this with irresistible might against the adjacent empires, and even, far
                beyond the limits of the latter, against countries and nations formerly
                scarcely known by name even to the Arabian merchant.
                
               
              Mahomet, or more properly Mohammed or Muhammad, (i e. the very famous), the only son of Abdallah and Amina, was born at Mecca, on the 20th April, 571. His
                father, Abdallah, was the best beloved of the thirteen sons of Abdul Motalleb, the son of Hashem, and chief of the family of
                that name; his mother, Amina, sprang from the noble
                race of the Zahrites. He had the misfortune to lose
                in his infancy, his father and mother, and his grandfather. His sole
                inheritance consisted in a house, an old female slave, and five camels. After
                the death of his grandfather, he was taken into the house of his uncle, Abu
                Taleb, who had succeeded Abdul Motalleb in the sacerdotal
                office. Here he was educated to commercial pursuits; and was, at the age of
                thirteen, sent with the caravan of his uncle to the fairs of Bosra, or Bostra, and Damascus, in Syria. In his twentieth year he
                fought in the ranks of the Koreish against some hostile tribes, and, by his
                valor, gained the appellation El Amin, i.e., the faithful, one of the five hundred and more surnames that have
                gradually been given to the Prophet of Islam. In his twenty-fifth year,
                Cadijah, a rich and noble widow of Mecca (according to some historians, of
                Bosra), engaged him as superintendent and manager to carry on the commercial
                affairs of her late husband. In this capacity he made a second journey to the
                fairs of Bosra and Damascus.
                
               
              Nature had bestowed upon Mohammed the gift of personal beauty. His
                contemporaries describe him as of commanding figure and majestic aspect; he had
                regular and most expressive features, piercing black eyes, an aquiline nose,
                and a well-formed mouth, with pearly teeth; his cheeks were tinged with the
                ruddy glow of robust health. Art had imparted to his naturally black, flowing
                hair and beard a lighter chestnut hue. His captivating smile, his rich and
                sonorous voice, the graceful dignity of his gestures, the apparent frankness
                and heartiness of his manner, gained him the favorable attention of those whom
                he addressed. He possessed talents of a superior order— his perception was
                quick and active, his memory capacious and retentive, his imagination lively
                and daring, his judgment clear, rapid, and decisive, his courage dauntless ;—
                and, whatever may be our opinion of the sincerity of his convictions, his
                tenacity of purpose in the pursuit of the great object of his life, and his
                patient endurance, cannot but extort our admiration. His natural eloquence was
                enhanced by the use of the purest dialect of Arabia, and adorned by the charm
                of a graceful elocution.
                
               
              Cadijah was a widow for the second time; she was in the fortieth year of
                her age—no wonder then, that a man so bountifully endowed by nature should speedily
                have gained her affection. She bestowed upon him her hand and her fortune, and
                restored him thereby to the station of his ancestors. Placed, henceforth, above
                the petty wants and cares of material subsistence, Mohammed had now full
                leisure to indulge his love of poetry and eloquence, and his natural
                predilection for contemplation. His marriage brought him into familiar contact
                with Waraka (Verka) Ben Naufil,
                a cousin of Cadijah. This Waraka, it would appear, had first exchanged the
                adoration of the heavenly bodies for the belief in the two principles of
                Zoroaster, (Ormuzd and Ahriman).
                This creed not satisfying his mind, he had embraced with fervor the monotheism
                of the Jews; but, disgusted with the absurdities of the Talmudists, he had
                seceded to the profession of the Christian faith, in which he had even assumed
                the priestly office. That he must have been a man of some talent and learning,
                is evident from the fact of his having translated the Old and New Testament
                from the Hebrew into the Arabic tongue. Now this man is usually mentioned by
                the historians of the time as the pupil of Mohammed, and the second convert to
                his new doctrine; but there are strong reasons to justify a belief that he was
                his master and teacher rather than his pupil and convert.
                
               
              It has been intimated already, that the history of the life of Mohammed,
                up to the time when he proclaimed himself the apostle of a new faith, is
                obscure and doubtful. From the scanty data, and the conjectural and
                contradictory statements before us, we can only gather one fact as pretty
                certain, viz: that the prophet of Islam had enjoyed
                some rabbinical and priestly instruction. Now we have seen that Mohammed was an
                illiterate barbarian, and not likely, therefore, to derive from conversation
                with priests in foreign lands that knowledge of the maxims, tenets, and
                traditions of other religious communities, which is evidenced in the Koran and
                in the Sunna; whereas Waraka had actually had a
                practical training in the divers beliefs of the Sabians, Magians, Jews, and Christians; and must, to judge by
                his translation of the New Testament, have been tolerably versed in the letter,
                at least, of the doctrine of Christ. From his repeated, and apparently
                conscientious, changes of faith, we have, perhaps, a right to conclude that he
                was a man sincerely in search of a religion that might satisfy his mind; nor
                need we wonder that the so-called “Christianity” of the seventh century should
                have failed to answer his expectations on this head. It would not be too much
                to say, indeed, that there existed really no Christian church at that period;
                the multitudinous contending sects who professed the name of Christ had almost
                entirely forgotten his pure doctrine, and, more especially, the divine
                principle preached by him of universal charity and good-will to all men. The
                grossest idolatry had usurped the place of the simple worship, instituted by
                Jesus, of an All-wise, Almighty, and All-beneficent Being, without equal and
                without similitude; a new Olympus had been imagined, peopled with a crowd of
                martyrs, saints, and angels, in lieu of the ancient gods of paganism. There
                were found Christian sects impious enough to invest the wife of Joseph with the
                honors and attributes of a goddess; relics, and carved and painted images, were
                objects of the most fervid adoration on the part of those whom the word of
                Christ commanded to address their prayer to the Living God alone.
                
               
              Surely, then, we may trust that it will not be imputed to us as a
                violation of the laws of probability, if we venture to assume that Waraka,
                finding his religious aspirations disappointed even in the Christian faith,
                conceived the idea of founding and propagating a doctrine of his own,—a species
                of eclectic extract from all other religions which he had successively professed;
                that, void perhaps of personal ambition, or conscious, rather, that he did not
                himself possess the most indispensable attributes and qualities of a religious
                and political reformer, he cast his eyes upon Mohammed, who, with his mind
                attuned to contemplation and to mystic thought, promised to prove a docile
                disciple, and whose personal beauty and grace seemed made to “persuade ere he ope'd his mouth”; and that he chose him as his organ, as
                the medium through which he might give currency to the coinage of his mind,
                content if the people would receive the fruits of his religious experience and
                ponderings as a new gospel, and cheerfully consenting to yield up the honors of
                the paternity to him who should succeed in rearing the infant religion.
                
               
              Waraka found in Mohammed a most zealous disciple, who considerably
                bettered the instructions which he received. From what we can gather from the
                scanty sources of information at our command, we think we may fix upon the year
                606 AD as the period at which
                Mohammed first became the pupil of Waraka; but it was only five years after, in
                611, that Waraka and himself had fully matured their plan to institute a new
                religion. Worthily to prepare himself for the assumption of the prophetic and
                apostolic office, Mohammed withdrew this year (as he had indeed done repeatedly
                before), several weeks, during the month of Ramadan, to the cave of Hera, three
                miles from Mecca. On the morning of the 24th Ramadan, Mohammed appeared before
                his wife, apparently greatly disturbed in mind. He called out to her to “wrap
                him up, to affuse him with cold water, as his soul
                was greatly troubled”. Having thus prepared her for his purpose, by exciting at
                once both her conjugal solicitude and her female curiosity, he proceeded to
                break to the amazed matron the great secret of his divine mission. He told her
                the angel Gabriel had, that night, appeared to him with a message from the Most
                High, appointing him, Mohammed, the sixth, greatest, and last of His chosen
                prophets, to reveal His existence and to preach His law to the nations of the
                world. The angel had brought down with him a paper copy of the uncreated and
                eternal Koran, enclosed in a volume of silk and gems, and had proposed to
                reveal to him successively and at his (Mohammed’s) own discretion, the chapters
                and verses of that everlasting record of the law of God.
                
               
              Islam (i.e. devout submission
                to the Divine Will) he had been commanded by the angel to call the new faith
                which it was to be henceforward his mission to preach; and which, to use the
                felicitous language of Gibbon, is compounded of an eternal truth—viz., that there is only one God—and of
                a fiction necessary to further the ambitious designs of the self-appointed
                missionary of this new gospel—viz.,
                that Mohammed is the apostle and prophet of God. Cadijah believed readily and
                implicitly—and no marvel either. Mohammed, to his honor be it written, had
                proved a most kind and attentive husband to the elderly matron who had raised
                him above the pressure of want. He had abstained —and till her death continued
                to abstain—from availing himself of the right of polygamy. He had proved his
                truth to her by unvarying affection. How, then, could she possibly have doubted
                his word? To her grateful and loving eyes, he must have seemed more than a mere
                mortal; and she may even have deemed it by no means extraordinary that the Most
                High should appoint as his organ and missionary one so pure, so good, so
                perfect, as her husband appeared in her sight.
                
               
              Cadijah’s conversion was speedily followed by the avowed declaration of Waraka in favor
                of the new doctrine. The ex-priest of Christ professed to see in Mohammed the Paraclete or Comforter, promised in the Gospel, and even
                ventured to support this view upon etymological grounds of somewhat
                extraordinary character. The Arabic word Mohammed is synonymous with the Greek periklitós (i.e. very famous), which, by an easy change
                of letters, may be turned into paraklitos!
                
               
              The next converts to Mohammed’s new faith were, his servant Zeid, who
                was positively bribed to it by the promise of freedom; his youthful cousin Ali
                Ben Abu Taleb, a boy of eleven, and not likely, therefore, to entertain any
                very deep religious conviction either way; and the wealthy and universally
                esteemed Abdallah Ben Othman-al-Koreish, called afterwards Abu Bekr (i.e. the father of the maiden); most probably
                from the circumstance that his daughter Atesha, born
                613, became one of Mohammed’s wives after the death of Cadijah. By the weight
                and influence of Abu Bekr, ten of the most respectable citizens of Mecca were induced
                to join the creed of Islam, among whom were Othman, who became afterwards
                Mohammed’s son-in-law. It had taken three years to accomplish these fourteen
                private conversions; and, guided probably by the advice of Waraka, the prophet
                had not yet ventured upon a public profession and propaganda of his creed. In
                the beginning of 615, however, Waraka died; and the bolder spirit of Mohammed,
                freed from the restraining influence hitherto exercised by that cautious man,
                aspired henceforward openly to the dignity of the apostolic office.
                
               
              We have already seen that Mohammed had informed Cadijah, and, of course,
                also his other disciples, that the chapters of the Koran were to be
                communicated to him by the angel Gabriel successively, and at his own
                discretion,—a master stroke of policy evidently designed by the crafty Waraka
                to afford full time for the gradual concoction of the new creed, and worked out
                afterwards with such admirable skill by his illustrious pupil; indeed, the
                ingenuity of this provision may be said to be surpassed only by that of another
                saving maxim introduced into the angelic revelation, viz., that any text of the
                Koran is abrogated or modified by any subsequent passage,—which, of course, at
                once removed the inconvenience of contradictory texts. Gabriel was accordingly
                now made to descend again to Mohammed, and to command him in the name of the
                Most High to throw off the reserve which he had hitherto maintained, and to
                announce his mission in the open light of day. In obedience to this pretended command,
                the prophet of Islam invited forty members of the race of Hashem to a banquet.
                He placed before them, it is said, a lamb and a bowl of milk, and, after the
                frugal meal, addressed them as follows:—“Friends and kinsmen, I offer you, and
                I alone can offer, the most precious of gifts—the treasures of this world and
                of the world to come. God has commanded me to call you to His service. Who
                among you will support my burthen? Who among you will be my companion and my vizir?”. A long silence of doubt and amazement followed
                this extraordinary allocution; it was broken at last by the impetuous Ali, then
                in the fourteenth year of his age. “O prophet!” he cried, “I am the man:
                whosoever rises against thee, I will dash out his teeth, tear out his eyes,
                break his legs, rip up his belly. O prophet! I will be thy vizir over them”. This response on the part of one so young, and the fierce threats
                which it contained, excited the merriment of the assembly, which was increased
                when Mohammed fervently embraced his young cousin, and declared most seriously
                that he accepted his offer. Abu Taleb, the father of Ali, was ironically
                exhorted to respect the superior dignity of his son, and to take care not to
                provoke his potent wrath. The prince of Mecca took the matter in a more serious
                light: he advised his nephew to relinquish his design, which he characterized
                as impious. “Spare your remonstrances”, replied the
                son of Abdallah; “were you to place the sun on my right hand and the moon on my
                left, you should not divert me from my course”.
                
               
              Braving the ridicule and the anger of the Hashemites, as well as the
                more determined and malignant hostility of the family Ommiyah and the other
                branches of the Koreish, Mohammed preached his doctrine henceforward publicly,
                with unflinching courage and untiring zeal, but for a long time with rather
                indifferent success, at least so far as his native city was concerned.
                
               
              Mecca was the sacred city of Arabia,—the seat of the great national
                temple. The annual pilgrimage of the devout Arabians to the shrines of the
                Kaaba, brought wealth to the coffers of the inhabitants of the favored city;
                and it was but natural, therefore, that the tribe of Koreish, who held the
                lucrative office of custodians of the sacred temple, should behold with
                indignation and dismay the attempt made by one from among themselves to subvert
                a religion so profitable to their interests. No wonder, then, that when
                Mohammed, sometime after the banquet of the Hashemites, ventured to proclaim
                his pretended mission before a general assembly of the Koreish, he was received
                with a perfect storm of disapprobation, and ignominiously pelted with mud and
                stones.
                
               
              But the prophet of Islam was not the sort of man to be readily diverted
                from his fixed purpose. The indifferent success of his first public attempt
                rather increased his zeal than otherwise: in private converse and in public
                discourse, he incessantly urged the belief and worship of a sole Deity. He
                addressed impassioned orations to the citizens and pilgrims gathered within the
                holy precincts of the Kaaba, and the loudest clamor of his most violent
                antagonists did not always succeed in silencing his potent voice; and, indeed,
                after a time he had the satisfaction of beholding the gradual but steady
                increase of his little congregation of Unitarians. But the hostility of the
                Koreish assumed now a more decided and more dangerous character; and, had it
                not been for the powerful protection of Abu Taleb, who, though an
                uncompromising enemy to the attempted innovation of his nephew, continued to
                bestow on the son of Abdallah the affection of a parent, Mohammed would most
                probably have fallen a sacrifice to the rage of his enemies. But even the
                weight and influence of the Prince of Mecca could not always fully secure the
                safety of the apostle of the new creed, and Mohammed was repeatedly compelled
                to withdraw himself to various places of strength in the town and country. The
                more timid of his disciples were forced to seek in Ethiopia an asylum from the
                violence of religious faction. The conversion of his uncle Hamza gave the new
                faith, most opportunely, a powerful support in the family of Hashem; a perhaps
                still more important acquisition was made in the person of the fierce and
                inflexible Omar, the Paul of Islam. On the other hand, the branch of Ommiyah, and
                the rest of the tribe of Koreish, resolved to put the children of Hashem under
                a species of religious and civil interdict of the most stringent nature, till
                they should consent to deliver the person of Mohammed to the justice of the
                insulted gods. A decree was passed to this effect, and was suspended in the
                Kaaba before the eyes of the nation; the prophet and his most faithful
                followers were besieged, and subjected to the greatest hardships. A hollow
                truce had scarcely restored the appearance of concord, when the death of Abu
                Taleb (621) left the prophet abandoned to the power of his enemies, and
                compelled him to seek a refuge in Tayef, whither he
                proceeded, attended by his faithful Zeid. His somewhat incautious attempts to
                propagate his creed in that land of grapes excited against him the indignation
                of the inhabitants, who pelted him with stones and drove him back to Mecca,
                where he was permitted to dwell yet a little while under the protection of an
                influential citizen. Three days after the death of Abu Taleb, an equally severe
                loss had befallen Mohammed—that of Cadijah, by which the ties which bound him
                to his native city were greatly loosened.
                
               
              It is in this period that we may place the miraculous night of
                Mohammed’s ascension to heaven. Hitherto, Mohammed had been modestly content to
                place an intermediary between the Deity and himself. Probably reflecting,
                however, that the Jewish creed asserted direct and personal converse between
                Jehovah and Adam, Noah, Abraham, and Moses, and that he, the greatest and last
                of the prophets, and whose doctrine was to supersede all others, could not well
                afford to stand inferior in this respect to his predecessors,—and anxiously
                desirous, moreover, to gain over the Jews, whom be wished to believe him the
                promised Messiah —he put forth one of the wildest flights of fancy that ever
                issued even from an Oriental brain:—A mysterious animal, the Borah (the cherub
                of Islam), with human face, the ears of an elephant, the neck of a camel, the
                body of a horse, the tail of a mule, and the hoofs of a bullock, conveyed him
                at the dead of night from the temple of Mecca to that of Jerusalem, Gabriel and
                legions of angels attended him. From the temple of Jerusalem he was carried to
                the rock upon which Abraham intended to sacrifice Isaac, and thence on the
                wings of Gabriel successively to the seven heavens, where he exchanged
                civilities with the patriarchs, the prophets, and the angels. He saw the
                heavenly lotos tree, with the four springs under it,
                flowing with water, honey, milk, and wine. Of the three former he tasted; the
                last he left untouched, in obedience to his own precepts. He saw, also, the
                heavenly tabernacle, pitched in a straight line above the Kaaba, and hidden by
                a golden veil. The angels sang, “There is only one God, and Mohammed is the
                prophet of God”. The same resounded from behind the veil, and the voice of the
                Lord was heard saying, My servants speak the words of truth; Mohammed is indeed
                the most beloved of my prophets and apostles, the most pious of my servants,
                the most perfect of created beings”. Beyond this part, Mohammed alone was
                permitted to proceed; he passed through seventy thousand veils of light and
                darkness, each of them a thousand years thick, and with a space of a thousand
                years intervening between every two of them. At last he reached the green
                barrier of green light with emerald lustre; he passed
                the veil of the Divine unity, and approached within two bow shots of the throne
                of the Almighty, where he prostrated himself and adored. The hand of the Lord
                touched his shoulder, which made a sensation of cold come over him that pierced
                him to the heart. God commanded him now to impose upon his disciples the daily
                obligation of fifty prayers; which Mohammed would appear to have looked upon as
                an intolerable burthen, since he pleaded hard for an alleviation of it. By his
                supplications he succeeded to reduce it, step by step, at last to the number of
                five, viz., one prayer at daybreak, one at noon, one in the afternoon, one in
                the evening, and one at the first watch of the night; but from these five
                obligatory prayers there was to be no dispensation of business or pleasure, of
                time or place. In this most important conversation, the Lord enjoined or
                sanctioned, also, the annual pilgrimage to Mecca, the bestowal of a certain
                percentage of the property or revenue of a believer for the relief of the
                indigent and unfortunate, and the thirty days fest during the month of Ramadan.
                Then was given to Mohammed, with one drop from the throne, all wisdom, science,
                and knowledge of the ages past and the time to come; and the angelic choirs
                recited the two articles of belief, “There is only one God, and Mohammed is the
                apostle of God”. Mohammed was then finally dismissed; he again descended to
                Jerusalem, remounted the Borak, and returned to
                Mecca, having thus performed in the tenth part of a night the journey of many
                thousand years. Verily, in this precious tale we do not know which to admire
                most,—whether the audacity of the impostor who could concoct, or the gross
                credulity of the people who could believe it! Indeed, many endeavors have been
                made by some of the more rational of the Mohammedan doctors to deny that the
                prophet of Islam ever ventured to palm off this extravagant story upon his
                followers; and it has been attempted to make it appear that the narration of it
                relates to a mere dream or vision. These apologists overlook, however, the
                important fact that this pretended vision was put forward with all the
                authority of a divine revelation. Mohammed himself encouraged as much as in him
                lay the belief in the actual occurrence of the fact; which, with the Sunnites,
                indeed, is an article of faith, the pious Al Jannabi,
                among others, declaring that to deny this nocturnal journey of the prophet is
                to disbelieve the Koran.
                
               
              Abu Sophian, the chief of the branch of
                Ommiyah, and the mortal foe of the line of Hashem, had succeeded to the
                principality of the republic of Mecca. This man resolved to bring the
                long-pending contest between the Koreish and the self-appointed apostle of the
                new creed to a speedy and decisive issue. He convened an assembly of the Koreishites and their allies, in which the death of
                Mohammed was resolved. To baffle the vengeance of the Hashemites, it was agreed
                that the guilt of his blood should be divided among the several tribes. A spy
                (duly converted afterwards into an angel by the crafty prophet) revealed the
                odious plot to Mohammed, who resolved on flight as the only means of escape
                from the malice of his enemies. In the night of the 13th September, 622,
                Mohammed, accompanied by his friend Abu Bekr, escaped silently from his house,
                whilst the assassins, who were watching at the door, were deceived by the
                figure of Ali, who, covered with the green vestment of the apostle, reposed on
                the bed, securing thus, at the risk of his own life, the safe retreat of his
                illustrious and beloved cousin. When the deception practised upon them was at length revealed, the Koreishites dismissed the heroic youth unharmed.
                
               
              Mohammed and the companion of his flight took refuge first in the cave
                of Thor, about three miles from Mecca. Three days they remained concealed
                there, receiving every evening from the son and daughter of Abu Bekr a supply
                of food, and intelligence of the movements of their enemies. The Koreish
                explored every hiding-place in the neighbourhood of the city, with the
                exception of the cave in which the fugitives were hidden, and which the pious
                Moslem doctors would have us believe was protected from their scrutiny by the
                providential deceit of a spider’s web and a pigeon’s nest. When the first rigor
                of the pursuit had somewhat abated, the fugitives left the protection of their
                cave, and mounted their camels to pursue their flight to Yathreb,
                called afterwards Medina, or Medina al Nabi (i.e. city of the prophet),
                
               
              On the road, they were overtaken by the emissaries of the Koreish, who
                were, however, diverted from their murderous purpose by the eloquent appeals of
                the prophet: indeed it is stated by the Arabian historians that one of his
                pursuers passed over to him with seventy followers, and attended him to Medina.
                
               
              The city of Yathreb was inhabited chiefly by
                the tribes of the Charegites and the Awsites, and by two colonies of Jews, of a sacerdotal race,
                and who had introduced among their Arab fellow-citizens a taste for science and
                religion, which had gained Medina the name of the City of the Book. Now whether
                it might be that, owing to this circumstance, the preaching of Mohammed had
                made a deeper impression upon the pilgrims and merchants from Medina than upon
                his own fellow-citizens in Mecca; or that the Yathrebites,
                who were envious of the flourishing commerce of the latter city, would gladly
                avail themselves of the opportunity afforded by the bigoted zeal of the Koreish
                to attract to their own city the exiled disciples of Mohammed, and in fine
                perhaps that illustrious man himself—-certain it is that at an early period of
                Mohammed’s mission, some of the noblest citizens of Medina, in a pilgrimage to
                the Kaaba, had been converted by his preaching, and had upon their return home diffused
                among their fellow-citizens the belief of God and his prophet. The Charegites and Awsites had
                hitherto lived in perpetual feud, interrupted only by temporary truces, which
                were broken on the slightest provocation. By the exhortations of these missionaries,
                the two tribes were henceforth united in faith and love. Ten Charegites and two Awsites were
                dispatched to Mecca, where they held a secret and nocturnal interview with
                Mohammed on a hill in the suburbs; they protested for themselves and in the
                name of their wives, their children, and their absent brethren, an inviolable
                attachment to the person and doctrine of the prophet. At a later period,
                shortly before Mohammed’s forced departure from Mecca, sevens-three men and two
                women of Medina came to Mecca, and held a solemn conference with Mohammed, his
                kinsmen, and his disciples, on the same spot where the interview with the first
                embassy had taken place. They promised the prophet in the name of their city
                that should he be compelled to leave Mecca, they would receive him as their
                prince, and would place their lives and fortunes at his service for the defence
                and propagation of the new faith preached by him. Mohammed on his part promised
                never to abandon his new allies, even though the Koreish should repent and
                should recall him; he declared their blood to be as his blood, their ruin as
                his ruin, their friends as his friends, their foes as his foes; should they
                fall in his service. Paradise was to be their reward. A solemn league and
                covenant was made there and then between the two parties; this was ratified by
                the people of Medina, who, with the exception of the Jews, unanimously embraced
                the profession of Islam.
                
               
              It was accordingly to Medina that the exiled prophet directed his steps.
                After a rapid though perilous journey along the sea-coast, he reached Medina
                sixteen days after his flight from Mecca. He was received with acclamations of
                loyalty and devotion; his disciples who at various times had fled from Mecca,
                gathered round his person. To eradicate the seeds of jealousy that might spring
                up between the Moslems of his native city, and his new allies of Medina, he
                judiciously established a holy brotherhood between his principal followers,
                coupling always a Mohagerian, or fugitive of Mecca,
                with an Ansar, or auxiliary of Medina. It so falling
                out that Ali found himself without a peer, the prophet declared himself the
                companion and brother of the noble youth.
                
               
              Mohammed assumed now the exercise of the regal- and sacerdotal office.
                He acquired by purchase a small piece of ground, on which he built a house and
                a mosque. The loyalty and devotion of his followers, and the unhesitating
                compliance and obedience which his decrees met with on the part of the
                inhabitants of Medina, convinced him that he was indeed the absolute prince and
                ruler of that city. But with this conviction the range of his ambition widened,
                he resolved to extend his creed and his power over all the tribes of Arabia,
                and even beyond the limits of his native land. He now threw off the cloak of toleration
                in which he had so carefully enfolded himself at Mecca. There he had asserted
                the liberty of conscience, and disclaimed the use of religious violence; here,
                at Medina, he preached a war of extermination against whomsoever should
                continue in idolatry. The commands and precepts, which Gabriel was now made to
                transmit to him, breathed a fierce and sanguinary spirit; the creed of Islam
                was to be propagated henceforth by the sword, and the unbelieving nations of
                the earth were to be pursued without mercy. To excite in his followers a spirit
                of martial ardor, he proclaimed the superior sanctity of the sword. “In the
                shade of the crossing scimitars Paradise is prefigured”, says Mohammed; “the
                sword is the key of heaven and of hell: a drop of blood shed in the cause of
                God, a night spent in arms, is of more avail than two months of fasting or
                prayer”. “Whosoever falls in battle, his sins are forgiven: at the day of
                judgment his wounds shall be resplendent as rubies, and odoriferous as musk;
                and the loss of his limbs shall be supplied by the wings of angels and
                cherubim”. Paradise was the glorious reward of the faithful who fell in battle,
                and death might thus actually become an object of hope and desire rather than
                of dread. Moreover, as the Koran inculcates also, in the most absolute sense,
                the tenets of fate and predestination, it would be little use for the devout
                Moslem to shirk his military duties through fear of being wounded or killed in
                battle, since his preordained fate would be sure to overtake him, even in his
                bed. And as Paradise was the portion of the fallen hero, so wealth and beauty
                rewarded the warrior who had escaped the dangers of the fight: the apostle gave
                his followers the license of embracing the female captives as their wives or
                concubines; he regulated by a law, divine, of course, like all the rest of his
                laws and precepts, the distribution of the spoil taken in battle, or in a
                conquered place: the whole was faithfully collected in one common mass,
                one-fifth of it was reserved for the prophet himself (doubtless, for pious and
                charitable uses), the remainder was shared among the soldiers, the shares of
                the slain devolving to their widows and orphans: a horseman received double the
                share of a foot-soldier.
                
               
              From the first mouths of his reign, he prepared for the holy warfare
                against Jews, Christians, and idolaters. At the beginning of the year 623, his
                white banner was displayed before the gates of Medina. Faithful to the national
                character, he, the holy prophet of a creed which the nations of the world were
                invited to look upon as divine, went forth at the head of his pious followers,
                the future denizens of a Paradise which in his extravagant Oriental fancy he
                had placed beyond the seventh heaven, to waylay the peaceful merchant, and to
                rob and maim, or murder him, in the name and for the glory of the Most High.
                
               
              So he went forth at the head of three hundred and thirteen Moslems, to
                intercept the return of the great caravan from Syria to Mecca, a caravan of a
                thousand camels, led by Abu Sophian, with only thirty
                or forty followers. But the Koreish, alarmed for the safety of their
                merchandise and their provisions, hastened to the rescue. One hundred horse,
                and eight hundred and fifty foot, advanced from Mecca to about three stations
                from Medina. Here, in the fertile and famous vale of Beder,
                they met the band of the prophet. The disproportion of numbers was great; in
                Mohammed’s ranks were found only two horse-men: informed by his scouts that the
                caravan was approaching from the one, the Koreish from the other side, Mohammed
                had hesitated whether to seize upon an easy prey, or to venture on an encounter
                with vastly superior forces; but the reflection, that a success gained under
                disadvantageous circumstances, would, with an impulsive people like the Arabs,
                go far to prove his divine mission, and would embolden his adherents and
                discourage his enemies, he resolved to give battle. With Abu Bekr by his side,
                he took his station on a kind of throne or pulpit. The white veil of Ayesha,
                and two black banners, were borne before his host. “Courage, my children”, he
                exclaimed, “close your ranks; discharge your arrows, and the day is your own”.
                Perceiving, however, that the Moslems fainted in their onset, and were hard
                pressed by the superior numbers of the Koreish, he betook himself with a loud
                voice to pray the succor of Gabriel and a legion of angels.
                
               
              He then started from his throne, mounted his horse, and, casting a
                handful of sand into the air, exclaiming, “Let their faces be covered with
                confusion”, dashed against the hostile ranks. The Arabs were a most
                superstitious people; their fancy beheld the angelic warriors, or rather felt
                their presence; the thunder of Mohammed’s voice revived the drooping spirits of
                his followers; whilst it carried confusion into the ranks of his enemies. The
                Koreish turned and fled. Seventy of the bravest were slain, and seventy
                captives fell into the hands of the victorious prophet, who had two of them put
                to death as a trifling installment of the debt of revenge which he meant to exact
                from his foes and revilers. The other sixty-eight were restored for a ransom of
                four thousand drachms of silver. From the field of Beder,
                Mohammed started in pursuit of Abu Sophian’s caravan,
                which, despite of the swiftness of its flight, and the skill of its guides, was
                overtaken and captured. A booty of 100,000 drachms of silver rewarded the
                pious robbers. But this great success had well-nigh proved fatal to Mohammed
                and his creed, and to the city of refuge. The fierce resentment of Abu Sophian and of the Koreish, brought into the field against
                Mohammed a body of three thousand men, among whom were seven hundred armed with
                cuirasses, and two hundred on horseback; three thousand camels attended the
                march of this host. Abu Sophian advanced to within six
                miles of the north of Medina, where he encountered the prophet at the head of
                nine hundred and fifty followers, on Mount Ohud, (AD 624). The Koreish advanced in the
                form of a crescent. The right wing of the cavalry was led by Kaled, the
                fiercest and most redoubtable of the Arab warriors. Mohammed had made his
                dispositions with considerable skill; his troops were successful at first, and
                broke the center of the enemy; but their eagerness to seize upon the spoils
                threw their ranks into disorder, and speedily deprived them of the advantage
                gained. Kaled, with his cavalry, attacked them in the flank and rear; Mohammed
                was wounded in the face with a javelin, and two of his teeth were shattered
                with a stone; Kaled exclaimed, with a loud voice, that the lying prophet was
                slain; and the followers of Islam, who looked in vain for the appearance of
                Gabriel and his angelic legion, to avenge the fall of “The beloved of God”,
                trembled and fled; still, in the midst of tumult and dismay, was heard the
                thunder of Mohammed’s voice, denouncing the impious tribe of the Koreish, as
                the murderers of God’s apostle, and calling down upon them the vengeance of
                heaven. Some of the most devoted followers of the prophet gathered bravely
                around him, and conveyed him to a place of safety. Seventy of the bravest
                defenders of Islam lay dead on the field, among them Hamza, one of Mohammed’s
                uncles. The inhuman females of Mecca, who had accompanied the expedition,
                mangled their bodies, and the fierce Henda, Abu Sophian’s wife, tasted the entrails of Hamza, with the
                relish of a cannibal. But Mohammed was not discouraged: his wounds had hardly
                been dressed, when the convenient Gabriel revealed to him that (for some
                unexplained cause) the powers of darkness had been permitted to prevail against
                him this once, and that Satan himself had fought in the ranks of the Koreish;
                he was, however, exhorted to persevere in his propaganda, and was assured of
                ultimate success. He rallied his troops, and even as early as the next day he
                led them forth again to battle; on this occasion the fight was, however, only
                of a desultory character, no great harm being done on either side. Still the
                result of it was, that the Koreish, having experienced the desperate valor of
                the Moslems, and more particularly of Ali and Omar, despaired of carrying
                Medina with their present forces, and retired to Mecca. But in the ensuing year
                (AD 625) Abu Sophian,
                having formed a league between the Koreish and several tribes of the desert,
                led a well-appointed host of ten thousand warriors against Medina. The number
                of the Mussulmans, however, had also considerably increased, and Mohammed’s
                army of three thousand men, awaited the attack of their foes, securely encamped
                before the city, and protected by a ditch and some field-works, which had been
                constructed under the guidance and superintendence of a Persian engineer. A
                general engagement being prudently declined by the prophet, the hostilities
                were confined to a number of single combats, in which Ali more especially
                signalized his formidable strength and prowess. Twenty days passed away in this
                desultory warfare, the apostle of God having, meanwhile, recourse to every
                artifice that his crafty mind could devise, to sow disunion in the camp of his
                enemies. A tempest of wind, rain, and hail, which overturned the tents of the
                besiegers, and which was, of course, duly claimed as a direct interposition of
                God in favor of his prophet, put the finishing stroke to the success of this
                insidious policy: the Koreish, deserted by their allies, were compelled to
                retire, and to relinquish, henceforth, the attempt to overcome Mohammed by
                force of arms. This last attack upon Medina is variously named from the nations
                which marched under Abu Sophian’s banner, and from
                the ditch which protected the Mussulman camp.
                
               
              During the earlier period of his mission, Mohammed had shown
                considerable leaning towards the Jews; he had selected Jerusalem for the Kebla of prayer, and had endeavored to form most of his
                tenets and precepts upon the model of the Mosaic ordinances. Indeed, there can
                be no doubt, but that it was for a time the great end and object of his
                ambition to be accepted by the Jews as their promised Messiah; nor can it be
                denied, that a deep political idea lay at the bottom of this desire. Had be
                succeeded in persuading the Jews to believe in his Messiahship,
                his apostolic course among the Arabs would have run much smoother, and many of
                the so-called Christian sects might have been readily gained over to his mixtum compositum,
                which might, indeed, be called t creed of creeds in the literal acceptation of
                the words.
                
               
              But the imposture was too shallow to take with so clear-sighted a people
                as the Jews unquestionably were: the pretended Messiah was repudiated by them
                with disdain, and the hostility of the Koreish against the son of Abdallah,
                was, in some decree, fomented and fanned by the Jews of Mecca. Hence the
                implacable and unrelenting hatred with which Mohammed pursued the unfortunate
                Israelites to the last moment of his life. That he changed the kebla of prayer from Jerusalem to Mecca, and that in his
                nocturnal journey to Heaven, he beheld the divine tabernacle in a straight line
                above the latter city, instead of Zion, where he undoubtedly originally
                intended to behold it,—could, at the most, provoke a smile of contempt and
                derision; but the appalling cruelties which he inflicted, both upon individuals
                and upon entire tribes of the doomed nation, must fill the mind of the
                impartial explorer of history with deep indignation against the man who could
                so avenge his offended vanity. His first exploit in this direction, was the
                expulsion of the Kainoka tribe from Medina, where
                they had hitherto been permitted to dwell in peace, by the large toleration of
                the Idolators.
                The prophet of Islam seized the occasion of an accidental tumult, in which the Kainoka had taken part, to place before them the
                alternative of embracing his religion, or contending with him in battle. A
                brave challenge this, to the unfortunate Jews, to do battle with him, and which
                displayed in the fullest, though certainly not in the most favorable light, the
                magnanimous disposition of the son of Abdallah, that has been so highly
                extolled by some historians. Still, even with the fearful odds of number and
                martial spirit against them, the feeble and unwarlike Israelites preferred the
                unequal contest to apostasy from the faith of their fathers. It was decided in
                fifteen days, of course with the total overthrow and capture of the whole
                tribe; and, had it not been that the Charegites,
                mindful of the friendship which once existed between them and their humble
                allies, the Kainoka, warmly interceded on behalf of
                the wretched captives, the prophet of God would have slain every one of them.
                As it was, they were despoiled of their homes and property; and driven forth,
                to the number of seven hundred men, with their wives and children, to seek a
                refuge on the confines of Syria, to which quarter the blessings of the new
                creed had not yet extended. The Nadhirites were the
                next to feel the weight of his arm. In their case, indeed, some provocation had
                been given, as they had conspired to assassinate the prophet in a friendly
                interview. Protected by the walls of their castle (situated about three miles
                from Medina), they fought with such boldness and resolution, that Mohammed was
                fain to grant them an honorable capitulation.
                
               
              The war of the nations interrupted for a time Mohammed’s operations
                against the Jews; but even on the day that the confederated nations had
                abandoned the siege of Medina, he marched against the tribe of Kobaidha. A campaign of twenty-five days sufficed to compel
                their surrender at discretion. They fondly believed that their old allies of
                Medina would, by their intercession, preserve them at least from the extreme
                measure of Mohammed’s wrath; —vain hope: fanaticism had made rapid progress
                among the Ansars. A venerable elder of the Charegite tribe, to whose judgment they referred their
                case, pronounced the penalty of death against them for their hostility to
                Islam. To the number of seven hundred they were led in chains to the
                market-place of Medina, where a grave had been dug to receive them; into this
                they were forced to descend, and the apostle of God indulged his vengeful mind
                with the sight of their slaughter and burial … Verily, verily, the blackest
                and most atrocious of crimes are committed in the name of God. A few years
                after the extirpation of the Koraidha, Mohammed
                marched, at the head of two hundred horse, and fourteen hundred foot, against
                the ancient city of Chaibae, the seat of the Jewish
                power in Arabia. Chaibar was protected by eight
                strong castles, which were successively reduced by the Moslems in sixteen
                weeks, not, however, without considerable loss on the part of the conquerors.
                After the fall of the castles, the city was forced to surrender (628). The
                inhabitants had their lives granted to them, and permission to dwell in the
                land, on condition that they should pay to the prophet, an annual tribute of
                the one-half of their revenue. But the chief of Chaibar was subjected to the most cruel tortures, to force from him a confession of his
                hidden treasures; and when the 100,000 pieces of gold, which had been
                concealed, were delivered up at last, he and several of the most notable of his
                people were mercilessly butchered in cold blood. It was in this campaign
                against Chaibar that Mohammed bestowed upon Ali, the
                surname of the “Lion of God”, gained by the slaughter of 160 Hebrews, who are
                stated to have fallen by the irresistible scimitar of Abu Taleb’s illustrious son.
                
               
              The Jewess Asma had offended the dignity of
                the prophet by some satirical strictures on his private life; he bribed a
                miserable blind Jew, named Omeib, to assassinate her.
                This wretched tool murdered the ill-fated woman in her chamber, and nailed her
                body to the floor; having some misgivings of conscience, he accosted the
                prophet next morning while at prayer, and asked him whether God might not,
                perhaps, punish the crime perpetrated  whereupon the pious apostle bade him to be of good cheer, as the killing
                of a Jew, even if not at all times a meritorious act, was, at least, a matter
                of perfect indifference to the Ruler of the Universe! In the same way he
                deputed assassins to slay the learned Jew, Eshref; in
                the name of God he sent them on their bloody errand! The venerable Abu was
                murdered in his sleep at his bidding: the poor old man had readied his
                hundredth year, and might safely have been permitted to die in peace, but
                considerations of the kind weighed but little with the son of Abdallah; an
                insult to his apostolic dignity could only be washed off in the blood of the
                offender. But why sully our pages with the long list of private and public
                murders perpetrated by the command, or at the instigation of, this precious
                pretender to a divine mission. . . sufficient has been stated to illustrate the
                cruel and sanguinary disposition of the man.
                
               
              Mohamed had left Mecca most reluctantly, and only when flight alone
                could preserve his life from the swords of his then all-powerful enemies. The
                thought to revisit as a conqueror, the city and the holy temple of the Kaaba,
                was ever present to his mind. When the Jews, by their disdainful rejection of
                his advances, had turned his friendship into implacable hatred, he changed the kebla of prayer from Jerusalem to Mecca, clearly indicating
                thereby, that, whatever might be the merits of Medina, the holy city of the
                Kaaba stood still foremost in his affections. As soon as he had firmly
                established his empire over Medina, and some powerful tribes of the desert, and
                had destroyed or expelled the Jewish tribes of the Kainoka,
                the Kadhirites, and the Koraidha,
                he projected a scheme for the conquest of Mecca, (towards the end of 627).
                Conscious that his power was not yet sufficiently great to prevail by force of
                arms, he craftily disguised his expedition against the city of his birth, in
                the form of a peaceful and pious pilgrimage. Seventy camels, chosen and
                bedecked for sacrifice, preceded the van of his host of 1400 picked men. The
                captives who fell into his hands, in his advance to the territory of the sacred
                city, were dismissed without ransom, to carry to the Koreish the solemn
                assurance of his peaceful intentions. All that the good man wanted, was to be
                permitted to enter the city, with his 1400 armed followers, to sacrifice the
                camels which he had brought with him for the purpose, and to perform the
                customary seven circumambulations round the Kaaba. Of course, had the Koreish
                conceded these points, the rest would have been a task of easy accomplishment.
                But the Koreish had had opportunities sufficient to know the crafty tongue and
                the false heart of the son of Abdallah. They encountered him, therefore, in the
                plain, within a day’s journey of the city, with such number and with such
                resolution, that he was fain to abandon his purpose for the time, and even to consent
                to the conclusion of a ten years’ truce, with the Koreish and their allies. In
                the treaty drawn up to that effect, he, the infallible prophet of God, the
                favored mortal raised by the Divine will to an equality with the cherubim and
                seraphim in the heavenly hierarchy, the trusted leader who had solemnly
                promised his believing followers, a triumphal entry into the stronghold of the
                most formidable and most dreaded of the enemies of Islam,—was obliged even to
                waive the title of Apostle of God, and to figure as plain Mohamed Abul Kasem. Still the Koreish
                granted him, for the ensuing year, the privilege of entering the city unarmed
                and as a friend, and of remaining three days to accomplish the rites of the
                pilgrimage—a fatal mistake on their part, and which they might have foreseen
                one so crafty as Mohammed would turn to excellent account. For the time being,
                however, the authority of the pretended prophet of God was considerably shaken,
                and some of the newly converted Bedouin tribes showed symptoms of disaffection.
                The successful campaign against Chaibar revived the
                faith and courage of his followers, and restored the wavering loyalty of the
                wandering tribes.
                
               
              After the conquest of Chaibar, Mohammed sent
                six embassies with letters to the neighboring princes, calling upon them to
                embrace the religion of Islam: the seal of the letter bore the inscription,
                “Mohammed, the Apostle of God”. The Greek emperor, Heraclius, returning in
                triumph from the Persian war, received and entertained one of these ambassadors
                with great urbanity at Emesa. Kobad II, of Persia (Siroes) tore the letter, and dismissed
                the envoy with ignominy. Mokawkas, the Byzantine
                governor of Memphis, a born Egyptian, and a Jacobite or Monophysite in religion; and who, in the disorder
                of the Persian war, had aspired to independence, and thereby exposed himself to
                the resentment of Heraclius, declined, indeed, the proposal of a new religion,
                but accompanied his refusal with flattering compliments and with gifts; among
                other, two Coptic damsels, one of whom, Mary, became the favorite concubine of
                the prophet, to whom she bore a son, Ibrahim, who died, however, at the tender
                age of fifteen months. The King of Abyssinia also returned a polite answer. But Haris, governor of Damascus, threatened war upon the presumptuous
                Arabian; and Ambit, prince of Gassan, a vassal of the
                Byzantine emperor, put the envoy to death, for which outrage Mohammed sent
                afterwards an army into Syria, with what results we shall see hereafter.
                
               
              According to the stipulations of the treaty of Hodaibeh,
                Mohammed was permitted to perform, towards the end of 628, at the head of a
                body of pious pilgrims, his three days’ devotion in the Kaaba; the Koreish
                retiring, meanwhile, to the hills. After the customary sacrifice, he evacuated
                the city on the fourth day; but in this short space of time, he had succeeded
                in sowing the seeds of division between the hostile chiefs, and to gain over to
                his cause Kaled and Amrou, or Amru, the future
                conqueror of Syria and Egypt. The interdiction of wine, and of dice and
                lotteries, falls in this period.
                
               
              It was after the return from this pilgrimage, that he sent an army of
                3000 Moslems against Amru, prince of Gassah, and the
                Greeks. The army was led by Zeid, Mohammed’s freedman and one of his earliest
                disciples. At Muta, three days’ journey from
                Jerusalem, they met the Gassanides and the Greeks: a
                fierce and bloody battle ensued; Zeid fell fighting in the foremost ranks; the
                holy banner, which escaped from his relaxing grasp, was seized by Jaafar, the
                leader appointed by Mohammed to succeed Zeid, in the event of the decease of
                the latter. Jaafar’s right hand was severed from his
                body by the sword of a Roman soldier; he shifted the standard to the left hand:
                this met the same fate; he embraced the holy banner with the bleeding stumps,
                and thus upheld it, till the tide of life ebbed away from fifty wounds. The
                vacant place was as worthily filled by Abdallah, the second successor appointed
                by the prophet in case of accident. He also fell, transfixed by the lance of a
                Roman. The battle was lost, the flower of the Moslem host annihilated, and the
                ambitious dreams of empire were dispelled at the very time when they seemed to
                promise fairest, —had not Kaled, the recent convert of Mecca, at this critical
                juncture, rescued the falling standard, and assumed the command, with the same
                bravery as his predecessors, but with still greater prowess, and with greater
                success. Nine swords were broken in his hand; and every enemy that dared to
                approach him, was made to bite the dust by his invincible arm. Night put an end
                to the contest: in the nocturnal council of the camp, Kaled was chosen, or
                rather confirmed, leader of the gallant band of warriors, who had survived the
                carnage of the day. Death had been fearfully busy in the ranks of the Moslems;
                and the Greeks, though awed by the valor of Kaled, had still an immense
                superiority of number in their favor. Kaled wisely resolved, therefore, to save
                the wreck of his forces by a skillful retreat. His admirable combinations, and
                the dread inspired by his prowess, rescued the host of the faithful believers
                of Islam from all but certain destruction; and the well-earned gratitude of the
                prophet bestowed upon the hero of Muta, the glorious
                appellation of the “Sword of God”, a name destined after to ring many a time
                and oft as the knell of doom in the ears of the affrighted Christians.
                
               
              Mohammed had never ceased to meditate the conquest of Mecca, and his
                power was now, indeed, sufficiently great and solid to promise an easy
                accomplishment of this, the darling object of his ambition; but the ten years’
                truce seemed an obstacle which it would not be easy to surmount.
                Notwithstanding, however, he silently prepared the means to carry his plans
                against the city of his birth into execution, should a favorable opportunity
                offer. The reverse which his forces had suffered at Muta,
                impelled the Koreish to furnish him with the desired pretext; they attacked one
                of the tribes confederated with Mohammed. Ten thousand soldiers were speedily
                gathered round the banner of the prophet, and led by him against the offending
                city. A rapid and secret march brought them almost within sight of Mecca,
                before the Koreish had the least notion of their approach.
                
               
              Unprepared as they were, it would have been sheer madness to contend
                against the overwhelming forces which now encompassed the city of the Kaaba:
                they resolved therefore to throw themselves upon the clemency of their
                triumphant exile. On the 11th of January, 630, the haughty chief of the house
                of Ommiyah presented the keys of the city; and confessed, under the scimitar of
                Omar, that the son of Abdallah was the apostle of the true God. The patriotic
                attachment which Mohammed unquestionably bore the city of his birth, and
                political considerations of a high order, stayed the avenging hand of the
                victorious outcast. Kaled had, indeed, slain twenty-eight of the inhabitants,
                ere the potent command of the prophet to spare the vanquished, could restrain
                his ruthless arm; but Mohammed blamed the cruelty of his lieutenant, and, though
                he proscribed eleven men and six women, few only were put to death by him.
                Among these was Abdolusa, who, after having embraced
                the faith of Islam, had relapsed into idolatry. Abdallah, once the secretary of
                Mohammed, and who had been employed by him to note down the fragmentary
                revelations imparted by Gabriel, had a narrow escape. The clear-sighted man had
                seen through the shallow imposture palmed upon the people by the pretended
                apostle; and he had imprudently boasted, that he also might claim the name and
                rank of a prophet, considering that he had it in his power to change, or to
                suppress, the holy revelations dictated to him by Mohammed. To escape the
                vengeance of his offended master, he had fled to Mecca, where he had, however,
                still continued to provoke his resentment by exposing and ridiculing his
                ignorance. When Mecca was taken, Abdallah fell prostrate at the feet of
                Mohammed, and implored his pardon. Othman, Abdallah’s foster-brother, entreated
                the prophet to spare the life of the humble penitent, a request which was at
                last most reluctantly granted, Mohammed declaring that he had so long
                hesitated, to allow time for some zealous disciple to strike the kneeling
                apostate dead at his feet. The poet, Huires, paid the
                penalty of his satires on the Apostle of God: but Soheir more wisely purchased, not only forgiveness, but a rich reward in the bargain,
                by one of the grossest and most extravagant pieces of adulation that ever
                proceeded even from an Oriental pen.
                
               
              The Koreish and the other inhabitants of Mecca, professed the religion
                of Islam, and acknowledged the temporal and spiritual supremacy of the prophet.
                The 360 idols of the Kaaba were ignominiously broken; Mohammed assisting with
                his own hands, in the work of destruction, nay, even lending his august
                shoulders for Ali to mount upon, to accomplish the overthrow of some idols
                placed a little above ordinary reach. This meritorious feat was performed on a
                Friday; which day was, therefore, henceforward appointed by the prophet as the
                holy day of Islam.
                
               
              But it was by no means the intention of Mohammed to despoil the city of
                his birth, of the lucrative trade in religion to which it had hitherto been
                mainly indebted for its preeminence among the cities of Arabia. The people of
                Mecca were agreeably disappointed, when they beheld the Prophet of God solemnly
                consecrating again the purified Kaaba, and performing the customary
                circumambulations and sacrifices as of old. They were readily reconciled to the
                belief in a sole Deity, since their astute townsman assigned a local habitation
                on earth to the idea of the God whom he commanded them and the nations of the
                world to worship, and placed this habitation within the walls of their own
                city. Even the black stone was not forgotten by the crafty politician : his
                reverential touch cleansed it from the pollution of ages of idolatry, and
                restored it to the pristine purity and holiness of Gabriel’s celestial gift to
                Abraham; and to crown all, he still heightened the sanctity of the holy city,
                by enacting a perpetual law that no unbeliever should ever dare to set his foot
                within its sacred precincts.
                
               
              The conquest of Mecca secured Mohammed the allegiance of many of the
                Bedouin tribes, who, troubling themselves but little about religious opinions
                and controversies, readily gave their adhesion to the cause which the gods
                seemed to prosper. But some of the most important tribes of Hejaz, and more
                especially the people of Tayef, persisted in their
                idolatry, and a great confederacy was formed among them to break the power of
                Mohammed. The prophet resolved to meet the threatening danger; he collected a
                host of 12,000 men, well-armed and well-appointed; the confederates had not
                one-half the number to oppose him. But the skillful tactics of the pagans, and
                the overweening confidence of the Mussulmans, brought the apostle and his new
                faith to the verge of ruin. Having incautiously descended into the valley of Honain, the Moslems were suddenly attacked on all sides by
                the archers and slingers of the enemy, who occupied the heights; the ranks of
                the faithful were thrown into confusion by the unexpected and fierce onset of
                the foe; and the stoutest hearts among them quailed, when they saw themselves
                caught as in a net. The Koreish secretly rejoiced at the impending destruction
                of their conquerors, and even prepared to go over to the enemy. All seemed
                lost;—despairing of victory, the prophet, seeking a glorious death, urged his
                white mule against the wall of spears that encompassed him: his faithful
                followers dragged him back, and covered him with their persons from the thrusts
                and darts aimed at his breast. Three of these devoted followers fell dead at
                his feet;—but the moment of weak despair was past, and soon the thunder of his
                voice was heard again, reanimating the sinking courage of the Moslems, and
                striking terror into the hearts of the idolaters. The Koreish forgot their
                treacherous intentions; the flying Mussulmans returned from all sides to the
                holy standard; and the attacks of the enemy were now everywhere vigorously
                repulsed. Defeat was changed into victory, and a merciless slaughter of the
                conquered and flying pagans, avenged the temporary disgrace of the followers of
                Islam. From the field of Honain, Mohammed marched
                without delay to Tayef, the center and stronghold of
                the confederacy. He laid siege to that fortress; but the desperate valor of the
                inhabitants defeated all his efforts to effect its reduction; and after twenty
                days spent before it, he deemed it the wisest course to rest satisfied for the
                time with the victory of Honain, and not to court the
                chances of an inglorious defeat. He, therefore, raised the siege, and marched
                back to Mecca. In his operations against Tayef, he
                gave an instance of how cheap he held his own laws and precepts, where they
                happened to clash with his interests : he ordered the extirpation of all the
                fruit trees in the fertile lands round the city.
                
               
              In the division of the rich spoils of the expedition of Honain, he acted with consummate skill. Instead of
                excluding the Koreish from their share, to punish them for their ambiguous
                conduct during the campaign, he bestowed double measure upon them; the most
                disaffected of them all, Abu Sophian, being presented
                with no less than three hundred camels and twenty ounces of silver: no wonder,
                then, that that rapacious chief and his followers should have, henceforth,
                become sincere adherents to so profitable a creed. The old companions in arms
                of the prophet were reconciled to this manifest injustice in the distribution
                of the spoil, by artful flatteries and promises of heavenly rewards: his own
                share of the plunder (one-fifth) he assigned to the soldiers.
                
               
              Although he had failed to reduce Tayef, yet by
                the extirpation of the fruit trees he had struck a severe blow against the
                people of that city; the fortifications had been considerably injured by the
                battering rams and the mining operations, so that there was ample reason to
                dread the event of a renewal of the siege. The people of Tayef resolved, therefore, to sue for peace; their deputies endeavored to obtain
                favorable conditions, and, at least, the toleration of their ancient worship,
                though even only for a short period. Mohammed would not concede them even one
                day; at last they simply entreated to be excused from the obligation of prayer
                to the God of Islam; in vain: Mohammed was inexorable, and Tayef at length submitted to the harsh conditions imposed by the prophet. The idols
                were broken, their temples demolished, and all the tribes of Hejaz acknowledged
                the supreme rule of the son of Abdallah. The ruler of Bahbeut,
                
                the King of Oman, and the King of the Beni Gassak, in Syria, confessed the God of Mohammed, and
                submitted to the sway of the prophet. Yemen also, and the rest of the
                peninsula, was reduced to obedience by his victorious lieutenants, and the
                ambassadors who knelt before the throne of Medina, (631, hence called the year
                of the embassies), were, in the words of the Arabian proverb, “as numerous as
                the dates that fall from the palm-tree in the season of ripeness”.
                
               
              Absolute master of the whole of Arabia, the son of Abdallah resolved to
                subject Syria also to his sway; he solemnly declared war against the Empire of
                the East, and summoned the faithful to the holy standard. But the prospect of
                the difficulties and hardships of a march through the desert, during the intolerable
                heat of the summer, and, perhaps also, the recollection of Muta,
                discouraged the Moslems; and the most urgent solicitations of the apostle were
                disregarded, or met by more or less cogent excuses. Still the great champions
                of the faith, Ali, Omar, Othman, Kaled, Amru, Abu Bekr, Abu Obeidah,
                Abbas, and many others, attended by trains of devoted followers, gathered round
                the prophet, and enabled him thus to take the field, at the head of ten
                thousand horse and twenty thousand foot. After one of the most distressing
                marches through the desert, the Moslem host was compelled to halt midway near Tabuc, ten day’s journey from Medina and Damascus. The
                hardships endured had considerably cooled the ardor of the faithful, and wisely
                declining to engage the disciplined forces of the Eastern empire with his
                wearied and dispirited followers, Mohammed contented himself with inviting the
                Greek Emperor once more to embrace his religion, and retired to Arabia; leaving
                a body of picked men, under the command of the intrepid Kaled, to prosecute the
                war. The valor and activity of that leader secured the submission of the tribes
                and cities from the Euphrates to Ailah, at the head
                of the Red Sea. Mohammed returned to Medina, where he pronounced a sentence of
                excommunication for fifty days against those who had been the most disobedient
                to his call. He then prepared for a great pilgrimage to Mecca, which he
                accomplished in the early part of 682, attended by 60,000 Moslems. In this, his
                last visit to the city of his birth, he gave a great number of laws and
                precepts; and, among others, the interdiction of the private revenge of murder
                and other injuries.
                
               
              It has already been stated, that Mohammed’s health had been declining
                ever since the campaign of Chaibar; yet such was the
                strength and vigor of his constitution, that up to the time of his last and
                fatal illness, he remained equal to the physical and mental fatigues of his
                mission. However, soon after his return from the last pilgrimage to Mecca, he
                fell ill of an inflammatory fever, with occasional fits of delirium, which he
                endeavored to combat by frequent effusions with cold water. When he became
                conscious of the fatal nature of his illness, he laid himself out to die, as an
                accomplished actor, like Octavianus Augustus. Leaning
                on his cousin and son-in-law, Ali, and on his uncle, Abbas, or the son of the
                latter, Fadl, he dragged himself to the mosque to
                perform the functions of public prayer: from the pulpit he called upon his
                subjects freely and boldly to state any grievance that any one of them might
                have suffered at his hands, and to prefer any just claims against his estate. A
                safe challenge indeed: the victims of his lust of power and revenge were laid
                in their graves, and could not appear against him there; nor could they prefer
                any claim against his estate, who had been despoiled by him or his lieutenants,
                in their predatory expeditions. No wonder then that the immaculate justice and
                piety of the Apostle of God, were fully attested by the silence of the
                congregation in presence of this challenge,— excepting a paltry claim of three
                drachms of silver, which was, of course, at once duly settled by Mohammed, with
                a profusion of thanks into the bargain, that the “creditor” had rather demanded
                payment in this world, than waited to accuse him at the judgment-seat of God!
                
               
              Up to the third day before his death, he continued to perform the
                function of public prayer; on that day his strength failed him, and he deputed
                Abu Bekr in his place, which was afterwards skillfully laid hold of by the
                latter and Ayesha, to found a claim to the successorship in the sacerdotal and regal office, in favor of Abu Bekr, to the prejudice of
                Ali.
                
               
              He then made his last dispositions, enfranchised his slaves, (seventeen
                men and eleven women), had alms distributed to the poor of Medina, and minutely
                directed the order of his funeral. He expressed a desire to dictate to his
                secretary a new divine book, the sum and accomplishment of his revelations, and
                which, according to Mohammed’s convenient maxim, would have superseded the
                authority of the Koran, in all points in which its teachings might happen to
                clash with the rules and precepts laid down in the latter. As Mohammed had
                preached an eternal and immutable God, and had declared the substance of the
                Koran to be uncreated and eternal, the gross absurdity of attempting a new,
                revised, and amended edition of it, could not fail to strike the more rational
                among his disciples. They, with Omar at their head, firmly refused, therefore,
                to consent to the prophet’s anxiously expressed wish—a curious comment on the
                sincerity of their professed conviction of his divine mission, and his communings with the messenger of heaven, and for which,
                their assumed belief that his mental faculties were, at the time, impaired by
                the effects of illness, afforded but an indifferent apology. Be this however as
                it may, the point was vehemently discussed between them and the more devout
                followers of the prophet; and the dispute, which was carried on in the chamber
                of the dying man, rose at last to such a pitch, that Mohammed reluctantly
                desisting from his desire, was forced to reprove the indecent vehemence of the
                disputants on either side.
                
               
              Even to the last moment of his life, Mohammed consistently carried out
                his system of deception. He told his friends about him, that he had received a
                last visit of Gabriel, who had now bidden an everlasting farewell to the earth.
                In a familiar discourse, he had once boasted of the peculiar and exclusive prerogative
                granted to him, that the angel of death should respectfully solicit his
                permission before he was to be allowed to take his soul. When he felt the near
                approach of his dissolution, he calmly informed the Moslem chiefs assembled
                round him, that the Great Destroyer had just preferred his request, and that
                he, Mohammed, had granted the permission asked! Stretched on a carpet spread
                upon the floor, and with his head reclining on the lap of Ayesha, the best
                beloved of his wives, he expired on the 7th day of June, 632. His last words
                Were:
                
               
              “O God! .... pardon my sins Yes .... I come, among my
                fellow-citizens on high”.
                
               
              His death dismayed his followers; the more fanatical among them could
                not bring themselves to believe in the actual departure of his spirit from this
                world. The idea of a trance, or of a resurrection after a few days’ apparent
                death, found ready credence with them. Omar, unsheathing his scimitar,
                threatened to strike off the heads of the infidels who should dare to affirm
                that the prophet was no more!—a curious comment upon his refusal to allow the
                dying prophet to rewrite the Koran. At last, Abu Bekr succeeded in making them
                listen to reason: “Is it Mohammed”, he said, “or Mohammed’s God whom you
                worship? Has not the apostle himself predicted that he should experience the
                common fate of mortality?”. This calm and rational address had the desired
                effect; the death of the prophet was admitted by all, and his body was piously
                interred by the hands of Ali, on the same spot on which he expired, and which
                is now surrounded by the great mosque of Medina. The story of the hanging
                coffin at Mecca is a vulgar and puerile invention, not worth the trouble of
                refutation.
                
               
              I have been led by the superior importance and interest which attach to
                the subject, to extend this chapter, perhaps, considerably beyond the limits
                compatible with the nature and size of the present work; still I cannot abstain
                from adding a short sketch of Mohammed’s habits of life, and a few brief
                remarks on the Koran.
                
               
              In his domestic life and intercourse, Mohammed was most simple and
                unassuming. The ruler of Arabia fed usually upon barley bread and dates; water
                was his ordinary drink, though he delighted, and occasionally indulged, in the
                taste of milk and honey; he never drank wine. The powerful chieftain who could
                command the services of thousands, did not disdain performing the menial
                offices of the household; he kindled the fire, swept the floor, milked the
                ewes, and mended with his own hands, his shoes and his woollen garment (the use of silk he rejected as too effeminate); nor was it an uncommon
                circumstance to see the Apostle of God barefoot. He slept on the bare ground,
                or on a carpet or straw mat spread upon the floor. He always performed, with
                the most rigorous strictness, the prayers and ablutions enjoined by the Koran.
                With the regal and sacerdotal office, he had assumed the reserve and austerity
                that befitted his high position; yet he would occasionally unbend in the circle
                of his friends, when he enchanted all around him by the graceful, though
                dignified, affability of his manners, and the charms of his conversation. He
                was passionately fond of fairy tales. He delighted in perfumes and cats, which
                latter partiality he shared with one of his contemporaries, the learned Abu Horaira, who gained for himself the surname of “the father
                of a cat”.' His hair, beard, and eyebrows, were the objects of his most anxious
                care and solicitude; he dyed them with considerable
                skill, a glossy light-chesnut color.
                
               
              He was most passionately addicted to the fair sex: in the indulgence of
                his amorous desires, he set his own laws at nought.
                The Arabians had enjoyed, from time immemorial, an unbounded license of
                polygamy; the Koran limited the number of legitimate wives or concubines to
                four, the prophet had seventeen wives; but then, Gabriel had descended with a
                special revelation, dispensing the favored apostle from the laws which he had
                imposed on the nation. Zeineb, the beautiful wife of
                Zeid, his freedman and adopted son, excited his desire. The grateful husband
                consented to a divorce, and the prophet added her to the number of his wives;
                but as the filial relation in which the young woman stood to Mohammed, even
                though only by adoption, was likely to produce some scandal, and to raise some
                scruples in the minds of the faithful, the complaisant Gabriel descended with
                another verse of the Koran, appropriate to the occasion. Again, in the case of
                Mary, the Egyptian slave, the indefatigable angel was at hand to oblige the
                Apostle of God. Had Mohammed liked wine, there can be no doubt, but that
                Gabriel would have been ready with another verse of the Koran, to dispense the
                prophet from the restriction imposed upon all other mortals. A better proof
                than the nature of these successive “revelations”, so entirely subservient to
                the gratification of his passions, could not well be adduced, to show that
                Mohammed was not, as some good-natured historians would fain believe him to
                have been, the enthusiastic dupe of his own illusions, but simply a cool and
                calculating politician, who made the institution of a new religious system the
                basis and engine of his power and dominion; most probably, sincerely believing
                also, that he was really conferring an immense boon upon his people. His
                vengeful and sanguinary disposition, has been already fully exposed in the
                narration of his life. The impartiality of history relieves those darker
                touches in the picture of Mohammed’s character, by a trait of unaffected
                humanity. His decree that, in the sale of captives, mothers should never be
                separated from their children, may well, as Gibbon says, moderate the censure
                of the historian. How the thousands of hapless negro mothers that have had
                their children ruthlessly torn from their arms in Christian America, would
                bless the memory of the Arabian legislator, could that humane decree of his
                find force and application in the Western Hemisphere!
                
               
              The Koran is the sacred book of Islam; the successive “revelations”
                imparted to Mohammed, were diligently recorded by his disciples on palm-leaves,
                skins, and the shoulder-bones of mutton; and the fragments, or “pages”, were
                thrown into a domestic chest, in the custody of one of Mohammed’s wives. In
                634, these fragments were collected and published by Abu Bekr; the sacred
                volume was revised by the Khalif Othman, in 651. It consists of 114 chapters (surats, i.e.
                stages or degrees), of very unequal lengths, and jumbled together without
                chronological order, or systematic arrangement. The chapters are made up of
                plagiarisms from the Bible, rabbinical and apocryphal legends, religious and
                moral precepts, descriptions of the joys of paradise and the torments of hell,
                declamations and rhapsodies. The style is, for the most part, inflated, rarely
                poetical, never sublime; yet Mohammed had the cool audacity to rest the truth
                of his mission on the incomparable merit of the Koran, as an intellectual,
                linguistic, and poetical performance. He blasphemously asserted, that God alone
                could have penned, or dictated, its divine contents; as no human, nor even an
                angelic intelligence, could possibly have conceived anything like them!!!
                
               
              The dogmatic part of the Koran (the Iman),
                comprises the two articles of faith, viz., the belief in one God, and in his
                prophet Mohammed; and the four practical duties of Islam, viz., prayer, ablutions,
                fasting, and alms-giving: these duties are reduced to the level of mere
                mechanical performances, without one atom of spontaneity about them, and are
                looked upon by most Mohammedans as irksome tasks, which must be accomplished,
                however, to secure the reward of paradise; the formal permission granted to
                supply with sand the scarcity of water, so that the prescribed lustration of
                the hands, the face, and the body may be practiced even in the arid desert,
                shows how little capable the legislator must have been to conceive and
                comprehend the true spirit and intention of his own ordinances. The Koran
                pronounces—of course: is there a religion that does not?—sentence of eternal
                damnation against all unbelievers; it imagines a gradation of seven
                inconveniently hot places, of which the highest and least uncomfortable is, of
                course, appropriated for the exclusive use of Mohammedans who have been lacking
                in piety during their mortal career; according to the less or greater gravity
                of their respective offences, they are condemned to remain denizens of this the
                mildest of the seven hells, for periods varying from 900 to 9000 years, after
                which they are admitted to the joys of paradise. The place immediately beneath
                this purgatorial hell is assigned to the Christians; the hell next to this is
                allotted to the Jews, whom the prophet of Islam would indeed gladly have sent
                down lower had he dared to treat monotheists worse than idolaters; the Sabians inhabit the fourth, the Magians the fifth, the gross idolaters the sixth hell; the deepest and hottest hell is
                destined to receive hypocrites in religion, and may therefore safely be assumed
                to be of larger dimensions and infinitely greater capacity than the other six
                together. The paradise of the Koran abounds in groves, fountains, and rivers;
                the blessed Moslems who are permitted to enter its gates will dwell in palaces
                of marble, eat artificial dainties and luscious fruits presented in dishes of
                gold, drink rich wines, dress in robes of silk, adorned with pearls and
                diamonds, and have a numerous retinue of attendants; and above all, each Moslem
                will enjoy the society and possession of seventy-two Houris,
                or black-eyed girls, of resplendent beauty, blooming youth, virgin purity, and
                exquisite sensibility—rather a pleasant picture for a sensual people like the
                Arabians. To the female sex also the gates of paradise are open; but the
                privileges and enjoyments which may await the ladies of the Mohammedan faith,
                are not specified in the Koran. Still, we must not be unjust: above the vulgar
                joys and sensual pleasures borrowed from this world, Mohammed places the
                delights of familiar conversation with the sages, and he expressly declares
                that all meaner happiness will be forgotten and despised by the saints and
                martyrs who shall be permitted to behold the face of God.
                
               
              Mohammed’s assertion that the Koran was the production of the highest
                intelligence, and comprised within it the knowledge of all times, has, ever
                since the establishment of his creed, proved a bar to the intellectual culture and
                progress of his people and of the other nations who were induced or compelled
                to adopt his faith; his interdiction to reproduce the human face and form on
                canvas or in marble, or any other material, and which with singular poverty of
                invention he had devised as the only possible check to idolatry, has had the
                natural effect to suppress and extinguish in the Moslem nations the love of the
                fine arts. True, when conquest had placed the wealth of empires at the disposal
                of the sons of the desert, many of Mohammed’s followers could not resist the
                natural longing after the treasures and enjoyments of science, art, and
                literature; and indeed the republic of letters is vastly indebted to many of
                them for their labors and researches in various fields of human lore, more
                especially in geography, history, philosophy, medicine, natural philosophy,
                chemistry, mathematics, and above all, arithmetic; algebra, geometry, and
                astronomy. But then, as A. W. Schlegel says, “All this was done, as it
                were, behind the back of the prophet and the votaries of art, science and
                literature, among the Arabians must, from a Koranic point of view, be regarded
                in the light of free-thinkers.
                
               
              The ritual of the faith of Islam, and the interdictions decreed by the
                prophet, had been already incidentally touched upon in various parts of this
                chapter; we have therefore simply to add here that the Koran commands eerily
                faithful Moslem to visit, at least once in his life, the holy City of Mecca,
                and the Kaaba.
                
               
              One great redeeming feature of the religion of Islam was that it was
                originally destitute of a priesthood, and repudiated monachism;
                the Ulemas were simply intended to be the expounders
                and interpreters of the law.
                
               
              On Friday, the appointed day of public worship, when the faithful are
                assembled in the mosque, any respectable elder may ascend the pulpit to begin
                the prayer and pronounce the sermon: there is no need of a duly appointed
                priest. But, unfortunately, the Ulemas and Imams of
                the present day act very much in the capacity of an actual clergy: and there is
                indeed no great difference between fakirs and dervishes and Roman Catholic
                monks.
                
               
              The Koran contains also the civil and criminal code of the Mussulmans;
                the punishments decreed in it for injuries, offences, and crimes are mostly
                based upon the principle of retaliation.
                
               
              Briefly to sum up : though it must be admitted that the religion of
                Islam, calmly and dispassionately examined by the light of reason, contains, by
                the side of the grossest absurdities, the most palpable falsehoods, and the veriest rubbish, much also that is true and of sterling
                worth; and that it has exercised a certain civilizing influence over the
                barbarous nations to whom it was first preached, yet few only will venture to
                deny that it lacks altogether the higher and most essential qualities of a
                universal faith. Even the basis whereon it rests, the great eternal truth of a
                sole Deity, is tarnished and clouded in it by the companionship which it is
                forced to bear to a miserable fiction placed by the side of it, and with equal
                attributes. There are some few, strange though it may appear, who almost regret
                that the victorious career of the Moslems should have been checked by Leo the
                Isaurian and by Charles Martel. What would have become of Europe—what of
                civilization, had the Moslems conquered? Let the admirers of Islam look at the
                state of the Mussulman nations of the present day: the fruit shows the quality
                of the tree. It is also a favorite argument with historians and others, to
                point to the numbers of believers in Islam, and to the twelve centuries that
                the Mohammedan faith has endured, as convincing proofs of the truth of that,
                creed, or, at all events, of a preponderating amount of truth in it. If
                arguments of this kind are to apply, the Mormon faith also may claim admission
                among the “received” creeds; and the names of Joe Smith and Brigham Young may
                be expected, in the course of fifty years or so, to figure among the “prophets
                and apostles of religion”.
                
               
              
                 
               
              
                 
               
              CHAPTER II.
                
               
              The khalifs from Abu Bekr to
                Hashem (or Hesham).
                
               
              
                 
               
              After the death of the prophet, his companions convened an assembly to
                deliberate on the choice of his successor, as Mohammed had abstained from
                expressing any explicit command or wish in this respect. Several competitors
                presented themselves, of whom Ali, Abu Bekr, and Omar were the most important.
                The illustrious son of Abu Taleb seemed indeed to combine in his own person
                every possible claim to the vacant throne of Arabia; he was chief, in his own
                right, of the family of Hashem, and hereditary prince of the city, and
                custodian of the Temple, of Mecca; the husband of Fatima, Mohammed’s favorite
                and only surviving daughter, might reasonably claim for himself and his two
                sons the inheritance of the prophet, who had always delighted in calling him his vizir and vicegerent; his valor and prowess had shone
                conspicuous in many a hard-fought battle; and even his enemies could not
                impeach the purity of his private life. But it so happened that Ali had drawn
                upon himself the implacable hatred of Ayesha: the conduct of this lady had, on
                one occasion, been rather indiscreet, to use the very mildest term, and Ali had
                urged his cousin to punish the frail fair. Mohammed was indeed inclined to
                jealousy, but the youth, beauty, and spirit of the daughter of Abu Bekr had
                established her empire over her husband’s affections so firmly that he rejected
                the clearest evidence of her faithlessness, inflicted a severe chastisement
                upon her accusers, and reproved Ali for his officiousness. Ayesha never forgave
                Ali the part he had played in this delicate affair, and the enmity she bore him
                was still heightened by her jealousy of Fatima, to whom she grudged the
                prophet’s paternal affection. Mohammed would most probably have named Ali his
                successor—and against the explicit nomination of the prophet, no voice would
                have dared a protest—but the artful daughter of Abu Bekr besieged his bed of
                sickness; and, turning the ascendant she had acquired over the uxorious man to
                excellent account, obtained from him that on the third day before his death,
                when he was no longer able to proceed to the mosque, he deputed Abu Bekr in his
                place to perform the function of public prayer, instead of charging Ali with
                that most honorable and important duty. After the death of Mohammed, she boldly
                asserted that he had “appointed” her father his successor in the royal and
                sacerdotal office. The Koreish, and more especially the branch of Ommiyah, the
                old enemies of the line of Hashem, eagerly espoused the use of Abu Bekr. The Ansars of Medina, and a few of the Mohagerians of Mecca voted for Ali; the crafty Omar was watching the event; a rash proposal
                made by one of his supporters to let each party chose their own Khalif, and to
                divide the empire between them, brought the matter to an abrupt termination.
                Omar, discerning the danger which threatened the rising Saracen empire, if this
                proposal were acted upon, renounced his own pretensions; and, setting the
                regular forms of an election at naught, hailed Abu Bekr as the first Khalif.
                The people acquiesced, and Mecca, Medina, and most of the provinces of Arabia,
                acknowledged Abu Bekr as commander of the Faithful. The Hashemites, however,
                remained true to their chief, and Ali resisted for six months the cajoleries of
                the Khalif and the threats of Omar. But the death of his beloved Fatima subdued
                his haughty spirit, and he consented at length to submit to Abu Bekr’s rule. Strange enough, when Ali had made his
                submission, the old man offered to resign in his favor; an offer which was
                prudently declined.
                
               
              During the latter part of Mohammed’s life, several other prophets had
                arisen in various parts of Arabia, and among them one of some note, and of no
                mean skill in the apostolic trade. His name was Moseilama; the powerful tribe
                of Hanifa, in the city of Yamanah,
                in Negev, listened to his voice. Confident in his power, he coolly offered
                Mohammed a partition of the earth between them. The prophet of Islam treated
                the offer with disdain; but after his death, several tribes, who had
                unwillingly embraced his creed, seceded to the standard of the new prophet, who
                speedily became a formidable rival to the Khalif. Mohammed’s uncle Abbas and
                the fierce Kaled were dispatched against him by Abu Bekr; but though forty
                thousand Moslems followed their banner, the first action against Moseilama
                ended in the defeat of Abbas and Kaled, and the former of the two generals was
                severely wounded with a javelin. This defeat was, however, fearfully avenged by
                Kaled; ten thousand infidels were made to bite the dust, and the same javelin
                that had pierced Abbas, was sent, a messenger of death, to Moseilama’s heart, by the hand of an Ethiopian slave. The submission of the revolted tribes
                speedily followed, and the dread name of the Sword of God was in itself sufficient to disarm all the other
                rebels who had risen in various parts of the peninsula.
                
               
              The victorious kaled was now sent to the banks
                of the Euphrates, where he reduced the cities of Anbar and Hira (AD 632), and, having slain the last
                of the Mondars of the Arabian colony of Hira, and sent his son a captive to Medina, prepared to
                invade the Persian empire; but in the midst of his triumphant career, he was
                recalled and sent into Syria, to take the command of the army there, and, in
                conjunction with Abu Obeidah, to effect the reduction
                of that province of the Greek empire. Bosra, a strong city situated four days’
                journey from Damascus, fell by his valor and by the treachery of the Greek
                governor Romanus. Damascus was besieged (633); and an army of 70,000 Greeks,
                who came to the relief of the hard-pressed city, under the command of Werdan, was totally defeated and dispersed by 45,000
                Moslems under Kaled, Amru, and Abu Obeidah, at Aiznadin (13th July, 633). Still Damascus resisted stoutly
                for many months, sustained chiefly by the valor of a noble Greek named Thomas.
                At length, however, the courage of the besieged gave way, and they surrendered
                to the mild Abu Obeidah (most probably in August,
                634), who granted them personal safety, and free possession of their lands and
                houses, and to such of them as should prefer exile to the Moslem rule, the
                permission to depart with as much of their effects as they could carry away
                with them. But the fierce and cruel Kaled refused to ratify these terms of his
                fellow-commander: he slaughtered thousands of the unfortunate Damascenes; and,
                though he consented at last to abide by the terms of the capitulation, he only
                gave three days respite to the band of voluntary exiles who left Damascus under
                the leadership of the valiant Thomas. At the expiration of this term, he set out
                in pursuit at the head of four thousand horsemen; a miserable renegade, named
                Jonas, acted as guide. The hapless fugitives were overtaken, and ruthlessly cut
                down to the last being of either sex, with the solitary exception of the widow
                of the brave Thomas, who was sent by Kaled to carry a message of defiance to
                the throne of the Caesars.
                
               
              Meanwhile the aged Abu Bekr, after a short reign of two years, had been
                gathered to his fathers; Ayesha’s influence and Omar’s craft had once more
                defeated Ali’s claims to the vacant throne; and Omar had gained the object of
                his ambition (24th July, 634). The new Khalif proved himself worthy of this
                exalted position; his justice, his wisdom, his moderation, and his frugality
                form, even to the present day, among the Sunnites,
                the theme of the most enthusiastic praise; though by the Shiites his memory is as bitterly reviled, and the appellation Shitan Omar, which the Persians so liberally
                bestow upon the second Khalif, shows the sense which they entertain of his
                machinations against the illustrious Ali. The son of Abu Taleb, however,
                submitted to Abu Bekr’s choice, and was comforted for
                the loss of empire by the most flattering marks of esteem and confidence on the
                part of the new commander of the Faithful.
                
               
              One of the first acts of Omar’s reign was to remove Kaled from the
                command of the Syrian army, under pretext of excessive cruelty, and of rashness
                in the pursuit of the Damascene exiles, but in reality because the Khalif bore
                a personal enmity to his invincible lieutenant. This made, however,
                practically, no difference in the conduct of the war; Kaled could command and
                obey with equal readiness, and Abu Obeidah was modest
                and sensible enough to guide himself in all important operations by the advice
                of his former chief. After the reduction of Damascus, the Arabs laid siege to
                Heliopolis (Baalbec) and Emesa,
                and speedily compelled these important cities to surrender (685). Heraclius
                made one last great effort to free Syria from these most unwelcome visitors; he
                sent four-score thousand Veteran soldiers by sea and land to Antioch and
                Caesarea; this host was considerably increased by the remains of the Syrian
                army, and by new levies in Syria and Palestine, and joined also by 60,000
                Christian Arabs under the banner of Jabalah, the last
                of the Qassanide princes. Upon Kaled’s prudent advice, Abu Obeidah resolved to retire to the
                skirts of Palestine and Arabia, and there to await the attack of the enemy. In
                the vicinity of Bosra, on the banks of the obscure river Yermuk (Hieromax), a fierce and bloody encounter took place,
                in which the Greek forces were totally routed (636); their  Gassanide allies
                had already previously met with the same fate at the hands of the intrepid
                Kaled. After the victory of Yermuk, Abu Obeidah resolved to invest Jerusalem (or Aelia, as the Romans called it); he first sent Moawiyah,
                Abu Sophian’s son, with the van of five thousand
                Arabs, to try a surprise; and this failing, he appeared himself, ten days
                after, with the whole army.
                
               
              After having endured four months the hardships of a siege, the garrison
                and people of the holy city offered to capitulate; but they demanded as a
                guarantee for the articles of security, that the Khalif should ratify them in
                person. Ali advised the Khalif to comply with this rather unusual demand; and
                Omar set out from Medina, mounted on a red camel, which carried, besides his
                person, a bag of corn, a bag of dates, a wooden dish, and a leathern bottle of
                water! Jerusalem immediately surrendered (637), and the Khalif returned
                promptly to Medina in the same simple manner in which he had come. The conquest
                of Syria was achieved the year after (638) by Abu Obeidah Kaled, who reduced Antioch, Aleppo, Tripoli, Tyre, Acca (St. Jean d'Acre), Caesarea, Ascalon,
                Hierapolis, and many other cities and strong places. Abu Obeidab died 639, of a fatal disease which carried off twenty-five thousands of the
                conquerors of Syria; the hero Kaled, the Sword of God, survived his
                fellow-commander about three years. The government of the conquered province
                was entrusted by Omar to the hands of Moawiyah, the chief of the family
                Ommiyah, and who became afterwards the founder of the Onmiade dynasty.
                
               
              After Kaled’s recall from the Persian
                frontier, the war against the empire of the Magians was carried on languidly for several years. In 636, however, Omar sent a new
                commander, Said, with considerable reinforcements to the army 0n the Euphrates.
                After the murder of Chosroes II and Cobad II, in 628,
                eight kings of Persia had followed each other in rapid succession, in the short
                space of three years. At last, a woman, Arzema,
                seized upon the throne; but, in she was deposed, and the tiara transferred from
                her head to that of the grandson of Chosroes, Yezdegerd (III), a boy of
                fifteen. A dying effort was now made by the Persians to drive back the Saracen
                invaders. An army of 190,000 men, with 30,000 regulars among them, was
                collected under Rustam, who, urged on by his youthful
                and inexperienced monarch, sought the Moslems in the plains of Cadesia, where Said had pitched his camp. The Mussulman
                forces numbered only 30,000; the fight was protracted for three whole days; it
                was bloody and obstinate in the extreme; the Saracens lost one clear fourth of
                their number; the fall of Rustam, on the third day,
                decided the fate of the battle and of Persia (636). The standard of the Sassanides (a leathern apron of a blacksmith, covered with
                a profusion of precious gems) fell into the hands of the conquerors. The
                province of Irak submitted to the Khalif, who secured his conquest by the
                foundation of the city of Basra, or Bassora, on the
                Shat-el-Arab (i.e. the river of the
                Arabs), which is formed by the junction of the Euphrates and Tigris. The
                Moslems crossed the latter river and took and sacked Madayn,
                or Ctesiphon, the capital of the Persian empire; immense treasures fell here
                into their hands, more than sufficient indeed to enrich the whole host of naked
                Arabians beyond their most sanguine expectations. Many splendid works art were
                destroyed by the ruthless hands of the ignorant sons of the desert. In one of
                the apartments of the white palace of Chosroes Nushirvan,
                was found a magnificent carpet of silk, with the picture of a garden
                embroidered on it in gold and precious stones, imitating the natural colors of
                the flowers, fruits, and shrubs depicted. Said preserved this splendid piece of
                workmanship, and sent it to the commander of the Faithful; but the precious
                gift found little favor in the sight of Omar; that cynical gentleman quietly
                ordered the picture to be destroyed, and divided the materials among his
                brethren of Medina: the intrinsic value of these materials may be conjectured
                from the fact, that Ali’s share alone was sold for twenty thousand drachms of
                silver. A new city, Cufa, was founded on the western
                side of the lower Euphrates, and the seat of government was removed to it from
                the despoiled Madayn. One Persian province after the
                other was compelled to submit to the Moslem sway; at Jalula, Tezdegerd nobly contended once more for the empire of
                his ancestors; in vain! the fanaticism of the Arabs proved stronger than the
                despair of the Persians. Said had been recalled, and Firuzan sent in his place; the courage of the Persian nation was not yet thoroughly
                subdued; 150,000 Persians attacked the Moslem host at Nehavend,
                about 230 miles south of Hamadan; but though Firuzan had only 30,000 Musulmans to oppose to the
                overwhelming numbers of the Persians, and though the latter fought with true
                bravery, fate had decreed the downfall of the monarchy of the Sassanides: the Arabians gained “the victory of victories”,
                and the hapless Yezdegerd, worthy of a better fate, like Darius Codomannus, yielded up all hope of empire (642). After the
                victory of Nehavend, the cities of Hamadan, Ispahan, Estachar (Persepolis),
                and many more, were readily reduced, and the conquest of Persia was achieved.
                
               
              Whilst Persia was thus being added to the new Saracen empire, another
                province was snatched from the feeble emperor of Byzantium. Omar had cast his
                eyes upon Egypt. With only 4000 Arabs, the valiant Amru invaded that country,
                in June, 638; after a siege of thirty days, he took possession of Farmah, or Pelusium, the key of
                Egypt. The reduction of Babylon, on the Eastern bank of the Nile, opposite
                Memphis, the ancient capital of Egypt, took Amru seven mouths, although he had
                received a reinforcement of 4000 men. On the spot where Amru’s army had pitched their tents during the siege of Babylon, a new city arose,
                which forms now part of an extensive suburb of Cairo, or Al Cahira, i. e., the victorious, founded by the Fatimite Khalifs (Moez), in 970. Notwithstanding the capture of Babylon and
                Memphis, Amru would probably have been compelled to relinquish his attempt to
                conquer Egypt, had not the Jacobite (Monophysite) Copts under Mokawkas,
                who would have preferred the devil’s rule to that of their Melchite tyrants, joined the invaders heart and soul. Under their guidance, and with
                their aid, Amru, who had, meanwhile, been considerably reinforced from Syria,
                marched from Memphis to Alexandria; which latter city was, after a series of
                preliminary combats, at last closely invested on the land side. As the sea
                remained open, Heraclius might have saved the great provision store of
                Byzantium, had he acted with the least energy; but the feeble old man contented
                himself with praying for the relief of the besieged city, and thought, perhaps,
                he had enlisted God on his side by appointing a priest (the patriarch Cyrus),
                to the prefecture of Egypt, and the conduct of the war. No wonder then that,
                notwithstanding a truly gallant defence by the inhabitants, the city was, after
                a siege of fourteen months, at length compelled to surrender (22nd of December,
                640). Omar’s commands preserved Alexandria from the horrors of pillage. The
                story of the burning of the Alexandrian library by order of Omar, is absolutely
                void of foundation; the honor of the first invention of this calumnious lie
                belongs (of course) to a Christian historian, Abulpharagius,
                primate of the Jacobites, who wrote 600 years after
                the event: but a crowd of historians have since faithfully copied it, even to
                its most extravagantly absurd details.
                
               
              With the reduction of Alexandria, the conquest of Egypt was achieved,
                Amru carrying his victorious arms even beyond the boundaries of that country as
                far as Tripoli.
                
               
              To facilitate the communication between Egypt and Arabia, Omar
                constructed a canal from the Nile to the Red Sea. Omar, the now mighty ruler of
                a most extensive empire, was revolving new plans of conquest, when the dagger
                of Firuz, a Persian slave, who had been personally aggrieved by the Khalif, cut
                short his thread of life—and saved the world from subjugation; for what nation
                or empire could, at that time, have long or successfully withstood the
                impetuous tide, which, in the short space of ten years, had engulphed Syria, Persia, and Egypt; and was full vigorous enough to sweep over the whole
                earth, had but the mastermind which had hitherto with rare wisdom directed its
                enormous material force, continued to breathe an intelligent will into it. Omar
                died in November, 644, urged to name his successor, he had refused to do so,
                but had devolved the task of choosing a new Khalif, on Ali and five others of
                the most respectable companions of the prophet. The illustrious son of Abu
                Taleb might now, indeed, have ascended the vacant throne, had he deigned to
                promise a servile conformity, not only to the Koran and tradition, but also to
                the sayings and doings of his predecessors, Abu Bekr and Omar. This demand his
                proud spirit rejected with disdain. Othman, also a son-in-law of the prophet, and
                who had been his secretary, accepted the government with these restrictions.
                The new Khalif was but little made to sustain the weight of the Saracen empire.
                He was a weak and vacillating old man, and led entirely by unworthy favorites,
                more particularly by his secretary, Mervan; he was
                arrogant and overbearing withal, and in the space of a few brief years, he
                excited the dissatisfaction and indignation of even the most loyally disposed
                among his subjects. At last the universal discontent was gathering to a head.
                Resolved no longer to submit to the exactions of the wretched favorites on whom
                the Khalif had conferred power and station, the tribes rose in arms. From Cufa, from Bassora, from Egypt,
                from the Desert, they marched on Medina: they encamped about a league from the
                city, and dispatched a haughty summons to their sovereign to redress their
                grievances, or to give place to a more worthy prince. Othman promised
                reformation, and Ali’s generous intercession might have succeeded in healing
                the breach between the Khalif and his angry subjects; but Mervan’s perfidy, and the deep intrigues of the artful Ayesha, defeated all chances of
                reconciliation between the prince and the people. In vain Othman ascended the
                pulpit, publicly and solemnly to entreat Allah’s and the people’s forgiveness
                for his misrule; he was pelted with stones, and carried home half dead. The
                insurgents besieged him six weeks in his palace, intercepting his water and
                provisions. The helpless old man had to endure the grief of seeing himself
                forsaken and betrayed by those on whom his misplaced favor had bestowed wealth
                and power. Abandoning all hope, he calmly expected the approach of death: a
                desperate band of fanatical Charegites, with
                Mohammed, Ayesha’s brother, at their head, made their way into his palace. They
                found him seated, with the Koran in his lap; but neither the sacred book, nor
                his venerable aspect could disarm the assassins. Othman fell, pierced with many
                wounds, 18th June, 655, in the eighty-second year of his age.
                
               
              During the reign of Othman, the island of Cyprus was conquered by
                Moawiyah, in 647, and the island of Rhodes, in 654; from the latter island, the
                Saracens carried off the massy trunk and the huge fragments of the celebrated
                colossal statue of Apollo, which had been overthrown about 800 years before by
                an earthquake. The large and once populous country of Chorasan,
                the kingdom of the ancient Bactrians, was also
                annexed to the Saracen empire, during the reign of Othman. In 647, Abdallah and
                Zobeir were sent with 40,000 Moslems to attempt the conquest of Africa. They
                advanced to the walls of Tripoli, and endeavored to carry that maritime city by
                assault; they were, however, repulsed, and the approach of a numerous army
                under the Greek prefect Gregory, compelled them to raise the siege. By Zobeir’s skill and valor, the Arabs gained a complete and
                decisive victory over the hostile forces, the prefect himself being slain by
                the hand of Zobeir. The opulent city of Sufetula,
                situated 150 miles to the south of Carthage, fell into the hands of the
                victorious Arabs. Abdallah prudently rested content with the advantages gained;
                he accepted the offer of submission and tribute made on all sides by the
                provincials, and retreated to the confines of Egypt (648).
                
               
              Ali had made a perhaps somewhat lukewarm effort to effect a
                reconciliation between Othman and his insurgent subjects. When matters had
                proceeded to extremities, he had sent his two sons, Hassan and Hosein, to the rescue of the besieged Khalif; and Hassan,
                the eldest of his sons, had, indeed, been wounded in the defence of that
                unfortunate prince. Still Ali had not been very energetic in his opposition to
                the rebels; and it is not uncharitable to suppose, that the death of Othman
                caused him no very bitter grief. Five days after the murder of the aged Khalif,
                Ali was proclaimed his successor by acclamation. The illustrious son of Abu
                Taleb was, indeed, a poet and a hero, but a most indifferent statesman. Telha and the valiant Zobeir, two of the most powerful of
                the Arabian chiefs, who had had a hand in Othman’s overthrow and death, and
                whose doubtful allegiance Ali ought to have secured by rich gifts and greater
                promises, saw themselves treated with studied coldness by the new Khalif, of
                whom they had vainly solicited the government of Irak, as the reward of their
                services. This impolitic conduct of Ali made them inclined to lend a willing
                ear to the advice and suggestions of the artful Ayesha, to raise the standard
                of revolt against Ali, and to charge him with the perpetration of the very
                crime which she had instigated, and they had lent their aid to execute! The two
                chiefs, and the widow of the prophet, escaped from Medina to Mecca, and from
                thence to Bassora; the unblushing woman, whose own
                brother had actually headed the assassins, had the almost incredible effrontery
                to send Othman’s bloody shirt to the governor of Syria, Moawiyah, Ali’s
                hereditary foe, and to call upon him to avenge Othman’s blood upon his
                murderer—Ali! The son of Abu Sophian was perfectly
                aware of the true circumstances of the case; but it suited his ambitious
                projects to appear to believe the infamous accusation against the august chief
                of the line of Hashem, the more so as Ali had expressed his intention to remove
                the head of the house of Ommiyah from the government of Syria. Moawiyah,
                therefore, exposed the bloody shirt of Othman in the principal mosque of
                Damascus, and denouncing Ali as the instigator of the sacrilegious deed, called
                upon the Faithful to rise and avenge the death of the holy martyr, whose lawful
                successor in the Caliphate he declared himself to be, in obedience, as he
                pretended, to the express command of the dying Othman. The appeal was
                numerously responded to, and the ruler of Syria saw himself speedily at the
                head of a formidable army; his friend, Amru, whom Ali had removed from the
                government of Egypt, espoused his cause. Telha and
                Zobeir seized upon Irak; 50,000 Moslems marched under their banner. At the head
                of 20,000 of his loyal Arabs, and 9,000 auxiliaries of Cufa,
                the Lion of God went to encounter his enemies. Under the walls of Bassora (2nd and 3rd November, 656) was fought the first
                battle of this civil war, which, destroying in internecine strife the flower of
                the nation of the desert, may well be said to have saved the world from the yoke
                of Islam; for had Ali been sole and undisputed master of the Saracen empire,
                even the fire of Callinicus would have proved no
                effectual protection against the then irresistible tide of Moslem conquest,
                and, mayhap, the Isaurian might have indulged his iconoclastic propensities at
                the head of a congenial host of image-haters; nor would the west of Europe have
                escaped, and the champion of the cross, the Hammer of Christ, might, perchance, have figured in history as the Ilderim of Islam.
                
               
              The rebels were totally defeated; Telha and
                Zobeir, with 10,000 of their host, were slain; and Ayesha, who, seated in a
                litter perched on the back of a camel, had braved the dangers of the field,
                animating the troops by her presence, and cheering them on with her voice, fell
                a captive into the hands of the man whom, with implacable hatred, she had
                pursued so many years, and whom she had so grievously injured; but the generous
                Ali disdained warring with women. Mohammed’s widow was treated with every
                respect due to her rank, and speedily dismissed to her proper station at the
                tomb of the prophet. The victorious Khalif, having in vain offered the most
                favorable terms of accommodation to Moawiyah and Amru, took the field against
                them at the head of 70,000 men, in the spring of 657. The plain of Siffin, on the western bank of the Euphrates, formed the
                field of ninety actions or skirmishes, in a desultory warfare of one hundred
                and ten days. The forces of the Ommiyah chief, are said to have amounted to
                more than 120,000 men, among them many of the veterans of the Persian, Syrian,
                and Egyptian campaigns; 45,000 of that gallant band paid with their lives for
                the ambition of their chief; 25,000 of Ali’s brave and loyal followers lay
                slain by their side—a rare crop of blossoms for the garden of the destroyer.
                The Lion of God was everywhere foremost in the fight; his ponderous two-edged
                sword, wielded with irresistible force, made fearful havoc in the hostile
                ranks; every time he smote a rebel, he shouted his war-cry “Allah Akbar” and
                the Arabian and Persian historians tell us with all gravity, that “in the
                tumult of a nocturnal battle, that tremendous exclamation was heard no less
                than four hundred times”. Making all due allowance for Oriental exaggeration,
                and striking one nought off the account, enough still
                remains to make the feat a most respectable achievement indeed.
                
               
              The magnanimous Ali had proposed to settle the dispute between him and
                Moawiyah by single combat; but to encounter so formidable a champion would
                truly have been sheer madness on the part of the prince of Damascus; he
                therefore declined the Khalifs courteous invitation.
                The chief of the line of Ommiyah was not so redoubtable a warrior as Ali, but
                he was a much better politician than the true and lawful commander of the Faithful;
                clearly foreseeing that the decision of the sword must in the end inevitably
                turn against him, he devised a stratagem to discomfit his dreaded antagonist,
                which being based upon a crafty appeal to the reverential and superstitious
                feelings of Ali’s followers, might reasonably be expected to have a fair chance
                of success. The Khalif bad resolved to terminate the long-pending struggle by a
                decisive battle; the troops were in presence, and the fight was on the point of
                being engaged, when a solemn appeal to the books of the Koran, which Moawiyah
                exposed on the foremost lances, made a considerable portion of Ali’s forces
                pause in their onset; emissaries of the prince of Damascus had long been busy
                in the unsuspecting Ali’s ranks; his refusal to hold the tradition, and the
                sayings and acts of Abu Bekr and Omar as equally binding with the precepts of
                the Koran, was regarded by many of his own followers as rank heresy; and so it
                occurred that at the very time when victory seamed secure in his grasp, the
                Khalif saw himself suddenly abandoned by the greater half of his forces, and
                even compelled by the vile rabble to submit his indefeasible right to a
                so-called “arbitration”; Moawiyah being permitted to appoint his friend and
                fellow-rebel, Amru, as arbiter on his part, whilst Ali was forced by the
                treacherous crew around him to name Musa, the cadi of Cufa,
                a mixture in equal parts of stupidity and conceit, to act on his behalf. The
                result was such as might have been foreseen; the decision was in favor of
                Moawiyah. Ali indignantly refused to be bound by it, as it was but top patent
                that the whole arbitration had been a disgraceful juggle from the beginning.
                But he was abandoned by a great many of his former adherents, and compelled to
                retreat to Cufa. Still he nobly carried on the
                struggle against the vastly superior forces of his enemies, and though Amru
                snatched Egypt from him, though Persia and Yemen were subdued or seduced by his
                crafty rival of Damascus, the final issue of the struggle might yet have been
                in his favor, had he not been foully murdered by a Charegite, who with two other fanatics had agreed to give
                peace to their troubled country by the removal of Ali, Moawiyah, and Amru. Each
                of the three assassins chose his victim, poisoned his dagger, and secretly
                repaired to the scene of action; but the stroke was fatal only to the lawful
                Khalif, though the prince of Damascus also was dangerously hurt, and the deputy
                of the viceroy of Egypt paid with his life for the honor of being mistaken for
                the illustrious Amru (661). The dying Ali mercifully commanded his children to
                dispatch his murderer by a single stroke. His eldest son, Hassan, was indeed
                saluted Khalif, by the party who had faithfully adhered to the banner of the
                Lion of God, but he was prevailed upon by Moawiyah to resign his pretensions,
                and the son of Abu Sophian was acknowledged the
                lawful commander of the Faithful; and Ali’s name was ordered to be cursed from
                the pulpit.
                
               
              The rule of the new Khalif was marked, upon the whole, by wisdom and
                moderation. Moawiyah disdained the simplicity of manners which had
                distinguished his predecessors; he dressed in costly silks, surrounded himself
                with a brilliant court, kept eunuchs for the guard of his harem, and set the
                prophet’s precepts at naught in the matter of wine-drinking. He would indeed
                shrink from no crime where his political interests were or seemed concerned;
                and the poisoning of Hassan, who had fondly, but foolishly, hoped that the son
                of Abu Sophian would forget that the title of Khalif
                had graced his name for however so short a period of time, and the base murders
                of Kaled’s son, Abdurrahman, and of the bold-spoken Hadjir Ben Hadad, who had dared
                publicly to protest against the cursing of Ali’s name and memory, are by no
                means the only blots on the reputation of the founder of the Ommiad dynasty;
                but he was not cruel and blood-thirsty from mere wantonness of disposition,
                and, as princes go, he was altogether rather a favorable sample of the class
                than otherwise.
                
               
              The first acts of his reign were to put down the rebellious Charegites, and to quell an insurrection of the people of Bassora. The three first Khalif had resided at Medina;
                political and strategic considerations had induced Ali to transfer the seat of
                his government to Cufa. Moawiyah made Damascus his
                capital, partly because Syria was the stronghold of his power, and partly—and
                this was unquestionably the principal reason—because his residence at Medina
                would have materially interfered with the accomplishment of the project nearest
                and dearest to his heart; viz., to change the elective monarchy to an
                hereditary kingdom. When he had firmly established his throne, he prepared a
                powerful expedition by sea and land against Constantinople (668); he entrusted
                the chief command to the veteran Sophian, and sent
                his own son Yezid to encourage the troops by his presence and example. But
                though the supineness of the Greeks permitted them to
                invest the city of the Caesars by sea and land, the Saracens met with a more
                vigorous resistance than they had anticipated; the solid and lofty walls of
                Byzantium, energetically defended by a numerous and well-disciplined army, and
                by a people aroused for a time to deeds of heroic devotion, by the danger which
                threatened to overthrow the last bulwark of their nationality and their
                religion, and the prodigious effect of the fire of Callinicus,
                defeated all attempts to carry the city by assault; and the Arabs, finding it a
                much easier task to plunder the European and Asiatic coasts of the Propontis, carried on the operations of the siege more and
                more languidly, till, at last, having kept the sea from April to September,
                they retreated, on the approach of winter, to the isle of Cyzicus, about eighty
                miles from the capital. However, they renewed the attempt six successive summers,
                until the enormous losses which they had suffered by fire and sword, and by the
                mischances of shipwreck and disease, compelled them finally to abandon the
                bootless enterprise (675). This failure dimmed for a time the glory of the
                Saracen arms, whilst it seemed to restore the former prestige of the Roman
                name. The destruction of his fleets, and the annihilation of his armies, had
                subdued the proud spirit of Moawiyah; the aged Khalif had the mortification of
                seeing himself insulted in his city and palace of Damascus by the warlike Maronites, or Mardaites, of Mount
                Lebanon; and he felt desirous of ending his days in tranquility and repose: he
                consented therefore to a peace; or truce, of thirty years with the emperor
                Constantine IV Pogonatus, in which he indeed was
                permitted to retain possession of the north-western part of Asia Minor, the
                island of Cyprus and the isles of the Greek Archipelago, but in which the
                majesty of the commander of the Faithful was woefully degraded, by the
                stipulation of an annual tribute to the Court of Byzantium of three thousand
                pieces of gold, fifty slaves, and fifty horses of a noble breed (677).
                
               
              Moawiyah’s arms were more successful in other quarters. His lieutenant, Obeidah, invaded the territories of the Turks, in 673, and
                made considerable conquests in Central Asia; and a large portion of North
                Africa was added to the Saracen empire by Akbah, who
                conquered Tripoli and Barca, founded the city of Cairoan, about fifty mils south of Carthage, in 671, and
                advanced to the verge of the Atlantic and the Great Desert. But the universal
                defection of the Africans and Greeks, whom he had conquered, recalled him from
                the shores of the Atlantic, where he was already meditating a descent oil
                Spain. Surrounded on all sides by hostile multitudes, and despairing of succor,
                the gallant Akbah, and his small force of brave men,
                had no other resource left them but to die an honorable death,— they fell to
                the last man. Zuheir, sent with a new army, avenged
                the fate of his predecessor; he vanquished the natives in many battles, but was
                himself overthrown in the end by a powerful army, sent from Constantinople to
                the relief of Carthage which he was besieging.
                
               
              Moawiyah died on the 6th April, 680. Ten years before his death he had
                seen his aspiring wishes crowned by the proclamation of his son, Yezid, as
                presumptive heir of the Saracen empire. True, there had been some murmurs of
                discontent, and it had even required an armed demonstration against the holy
                cities of Mecca and Medina to enforce submission to the will of the Khalif; but Moawiyah’s vigor and address had triumphed over every
                obstacle, Accordingly, after the father’s death, the son was acknowledged as
                Khalif in every province of the vast empire; with some partial exceptions,
                indeed, in Arabia proper, and more particularly in Mecca and Medina. But Yezid
                had inherited none of his father’s qualities; he was a dissolute voluptuarian, and of a most tyrannical disposition withal.
                In the short time of a few months, the discontent of his subjects had ripen to
                a threatening height; more especially in Arabia proper, and in the province of
                Irak. People’s eyes began to turn towards Hosein, the
                younger and only surviving son of Ali and Fatima, and head of the line of
                Hashem. Hosein had served with distinction in the
                siege of Constantinople; he had inherited some of his father’s spirit, and had
                disdainfully refused to acknowledge Yezid’s title. He
                was invited by a large body of the discontented in Irak, to come and place
                himself at their head; against the advice of his wife and many of his friends,
                he resolved to obey the call, and set out with a small retinue, consisting
                chiefly of women and children. When he reached the confines of Irak Obeidollah, the watchful and energetic governor of Cufa, had already crushed the insurrection in the bud. In
                the plains of Kerbela, Hosein found himself
                surrounded on all sides by a body of five thousand horse. Unconditional
                surrender or death was the only alternative offered to him; he chose the
                latter, and, after deeds of the most heroic valor, his generous band of devoted
                adherents were all slain, basely butchered from afar with arrows by their
                cowardly assailants: he, alone, still survived, though bleeding from many a
                wound. He seated himself at the door of his tent, enfolding his youngest son
                and his nephew, two beautiful children, in his arms; they were slain there, and
                their warm life-blood overflowed the hands of the hapless man. With a cry of
                grief and despair, he started up and threw himself in the midst of the foe. The
                soldiers fell back on every side, and, for a time, none dared to lay hands on
                the grandson of the prophet; but, at last, one of their leaders, the
                remorseless Shamee, urged them to the attack, and the
                heroic Hosein was slain, with three-and-thirty
                strokes of lances and swords. The dead body was trampled underfoot by the
                inhuman wretches, and the severed head carried to the castle of Cufa, and thence forwarded to Damascus, that Yezid might
                look upon it and sleep in peace. An expedition was sent against the holy
                cities, which, after Hosein’s death, had acknowledged
                for their Khalif, Abdallah, the son of the valiant Zobeir. Medina was taken,
                and the sisters and children of Hosein and Hassan
                were sent in chains to the throne of Damascus. Yezid was urged by his advisers
                to bury his fears for ever in the grave of the race of Ali and Fatima. Now, had
                Yezid been one of the Christian Caesars of Byzantium, who “thought it no very
                great harm” to slay even their own kindred, or to deprive them of sight, or
                mutilate them in some other way, if undisputed empire could but be secured
                thereby, no doubt the advice would have been followed to the letter: but the
                grandson of the wild Henda was not altogether without
                some of the better feelings of human nature, and the Saracen Khalif had no
                convenient “patriarch”, or bishop, at hand to lull his troublesome conscience
                by the mockery of priestly absolution. The mourning, family were honorably
                dismissed to Medina, and Yezid even strove to console them for the irreparable
                losses they had suffered at his father’s and his own hands.
                
               
              The partial successes of Yezid’s generals
                against Abdallah did not prevent that indefatigable warrior from seizing upon
                Yemen, and establishing his power in Egypt. After a troubled reign of three
                years, Yezid died (683); and a few months after his death, his son and
                successor, Moawiyah II, preferred voluntary abdication to the desperate
                struggle which he foresaw it would cost to oust Abdallah from his usurped
                position. For a time, complete anarchy ensued: Obeidollah,
                the governor of Irak, attempted to found a new empire and a new dynasty, in Bassora, but he was ignominiously expelled by the people;
                and the provinces of Irak, Yemen, Hejaz, and Egypt, acknowledged the name and
                sovereignty of Abdallah. Even in Syria, a creature of Abdallah’s, Dehac, was, for a time, obeyed as vicegerent. At last,
                however, Mervan, of the line of Ommiyah, was saluted
                Khalif in Damascus (684), on condition, however, as he bound himself by oath, to name Kaled, Yezid’s younger son,
                his successor. Mervan speedily succeeded in
                subjecting Syria and Egypt to his sway. The people of Chorasan,
                where the Hashemites had gained considerable ascendancy, renounced their
                allegiance to the empire, proclaimed their independence, and elected the noble
                Salem their king. Soliman, the son of Zarad, excited
                a formidable insurrection in Arabia Proper, and in part of Syria, and
                proclaimed the deposition of both rival Khalifs; but
                he was defeated by Obeidollah. Mervan,
                forgetful of his oath, proclaimed his son, Abd-el-Malek, his successor; he fell by the dagger of his offended
                kinsman, Kaled (685). But Abd-el-Malek made good his claim to the succession, and set diligently about to strengthen
                his position in the provinces which his father had wrested from Abdallah’s
                grasp. In Abd-el-Malek the
                latter found an antagonist worthy of himself, both in valor and wile. The
                actual struggle between the two rivals was, however, postponed for a season by
                the appearance of a third party on the scene,—Mokhtab,
                another inspired prophet, and whose chances of establishing another new creed
                seemed, for a time, to promise rather fair; in fact, the city of Cufa, and part of the province of Irak, had acknowledged
                his divine mission, when Abdallah’s good sword proved him an impostor (686).
                The Greeks had, meanwhile, taken advantage of the distress and fears of the
                house of Ommiyah, but in their own paltry and pettifogging way; for instead of
                boldly drawing the sword to wrest Asia Minor, Palestine, and Syria from the
                enfeebled grasp of the divided Saracens, they were content with obtaining from Abd-el-Malek a considerable
                increase of the tribute.
                
               
              Abd-el-Malek, relieved thus from his apprehensions of a war with
                the Eastern empire, could now turn his undivided attention to the impending
                struggle with the rival Khalif of Mecca. After five years’ fierce and doubtful
                contest, Abdallah was at length defeated in a decisive battle, and compelled to
                take refuge in Mecca; here he defended himself for seven months against Abd-el-Malek’s vastly superior
                forces. At last, in a general assault, the valiant son of Zobeir was slain; his
                fall decided that of the city, and the Saracen empire was thus again united
                under one ruler (692). As soon as Abd-el-Malek saw himself sole and undisputed Khalif, he threw off
                the badge of servitude to the Eastern empire, which the internal dissensions
                and troubles of the preceding years had compelled him to submit to. He
                discontinued the payment of the stipulated tribute, and even wrested another
                province, Armenia, from the feeble hands of the Byzantine Caesars.
                
               
              Hassan, the governor of Egypt, was charged with the task to reconquer the north of Africa. That brave and skillful
                commander, after having subdued the provinces of the interior, carried his
                victorious arms to the sea-coast, and took, by a sudden assault, the
                fortifications of Carthage, the metropolis of Africa, (697). However, the
                unexpected arrival of a powerful Greek fleet, with a numerous and well-appointed
                army on board, compelled the Arabian general to evacuate his recent conquest,
                and to retire to Cairoan. But Abd-eb-Malek had resolved to annex North Africa to his dominions at any cost; he prepared
                therefore during the winter a powerful armament by sea and land, and in spring,
                698, Hassan appeared once more before Carthage, and compelled the prefect and
                patrician John, who commanded the Greek forces, to evacuate the city; soon
                after, he defeated him again in the neighbourhood of Utica, and a precipitate
                embarkation alone saved the remains of the Byzantine army from absolute
                annihilation. Carthage was reduced to a heap of ruins. But Hassan had soon to
                encounter a more formidable enemy: a prophetess arose among the Moors, or
                Berbers, of the interior, and boldly challenged the Arabian invaders to make
                good their claim to the land which they had fondly deemed subdued with the
                expulsion of the Greeks. Cahina was the name of this
                extraordinary woman, who seemed to have discovered the secret of breathing into
                her people a spirit of enthusiasm superior even to the fanaticism of the
                Moslems. In a single day Africa was lost again to the Saracens, and the humbled
                Hassan retired to the confines of Egypt, where he expected, five years, the
                promised succor of the Khalif. But Queen Cahina’s order to destroy the cities, and to cut down the fruit-trees, filled the
                Christian population of the coast with apprehension and anger; and when Hassan
                at last made his reappearance in the province, he was hailed, even by the most
                zealous Catholics, as a deliverer and savior. The royal prophetess boldly
                accepted battle; but she was slain, and her army was put to the rout (705).
                Still the spirit of resistance survived, and Hassan’s successor, the aged but
                fiery Musa Ben Nassib, had to quell a new
                insurrection of the Moorish tribes. He and his two sons, Abdallah and Abdelaziz, succeeded so well, however, that not only did
                the Berbers submit to the Khalif, but they even embraced the religion of Islam,
                and became henceforth as one people with their Arabian conquerors.
                
               
              Abd-el-Malek was the first Khalif to establish a national mint,
                both for silver and gold coin (695); the gold coins were imitations of the
                Roman gold denar, with an inscription proclaiming the
                unity of the God of Mohammed; the Arabs called these gold coins, dinars. It
                would appear they struck also double, and half, dinars. Abd-el-Malek died in 705. He was succeeded by his son Walid, a prince who, indeed, did not inherit the activity,
                vigor, and decision of his father; but was, on the other hand, free also from
                the cruelty and the low avarice that stained the character of Abd-el-Malek. Walid loved and encouraged arts and sciences, and more especially architecture : he
                built the splendid mosque of the Ommiades at
                Damascus; he rebuilt also Mohammed’s mosque at Medina, on a larger and more
                magnificent scale. He had the good fortune to be served by clever ministers and
                great generals, whose energy, valor, and enterprise amply made up for the
                personal indolence and inactivity of the Khalif, and imparted a glory to his
                reign, rivaling that of Omar’s. One of his lieutenants, Catibah (the camel driver), added to the Saracen empire the spacious regions between
                the Oxus, the Jaxartes, and the Caspian sea, with the rich and populous
                commercial cities Carizme, Bochara,
                and Samarcand (707-710). From Samarcand,
                the victorious general sent his master a daughter of Phirouz,
                or Firuz, the son of the unfortunate Yezdegerd, the last of the Sassanide
                rulers of Persia, who became Walid’s wife. Mohammed,
                one of Catibah’s colleagues, displayed the banner of
                Islam on the opposite banks of the Indus (712); and in the same year, Fargana, the residence of the Chagan of the Turks, was taken by Catibah, who advanced as
                far as Cashgar, where he received an embassy from the
                Emperor of China. Walid’s brother, Moslemah, one of
                the most redoubtable of the Mussulman warriors known to history, defeated the Chazars in the Caucasus, and annexed Galatia and other
                parts of Asia Minor to the empire of his brother (710). But the greatest and
                most glorious conquest was that of Spain. As early as the time of Othman, the
                Arabs had cast a longing eye upon the fair land of Handalusia, and their piratical
                squadrons had more than once ravaged the Spanish coast. The Gothic king, Wamba, had defeated one of their expeditionary corps in
                675. Since that time no further attempt had been made on the kingdom of the
                Visigoths; but the latter, beholding with apprehension the establishment of the
                Arabian power in North Africa, had, in 697, aided the Byzantine emperor in the
                attempted relief of Carthage. The king of Spain possessed on the African coast
                the fortress of Ceuta (Septa or Septum) one of the columns of Hercules, which
                is divided by a narrow strait from the opposite pillar or point on the European
                coast. This fortress was held at the beginning of the eighth century by the
                Gothic Count Julian, brother-in-law of Oppas,
                archbishop of Toledo and Seville, whose brother, Witiza,
                was then king of Spain. In 709, Musa made an attempt to reduce Ceuta, and
                subdue the small portion of Mauritania which was still wanting to the conquest
                of North Africa; but he was repulsed by Count Julian with considerable loss,
                and would most probably have relinquished his project upon Spain, had not
                internal dissensions among the Gothic magnates unexpectedly opened to him a
                fair prospect of success. King Witiza had attempted
                to reform the truly appalling licentiousness of the Spanish clergy, and to curb
                the overgrown power of the nobility; but lacking both the crafty wile of the
                eleventh Louis of France, and the strong despotic will of the Tudors of
                England, his well-meant efforts simply led to his own deposition (710), which
                he survived only a few months. The clergy and nobility elected a king after
                their own heart, in the person of Roderic, a grandson
                of King Reccaswinth (or Receswinth).
                The two sons of Witiza, and their uncle Oppas, conspired to overthrow the new monarch, who, it
                would appear, had been indiscreet enough to express his intention of removing
                Count Julian from his Andalusian and Mauritanian
                commands, the moment he should think himself sufficiently powerful to give due
                force to his royal decrees. The threatened count was readily induced to join
                the party of the conspirators; but dreading lest the force which they could
                bring into the field, should prove unavailing against the monarch’s power, he,
                who had hitherto been the staunchest defender of his country, did not hesitate
                to betray her to the Saracen foe, and to open wide the portals that had been
                entrusted to his honor and patriotism to guard. He and his fellow-conspirators
                endeavored to soothe the misgivings of conscience with Musa’s deceptive
                assurance, that he did not intend to establish himself in Spain, but would rest
                content with a share of the spoil.
                
               
              As soon as Musa had obtained Walid’s sanction
                to the contemplated enterprise, he sent off an expedition of only four vessels,
                with five hundred men on board, to explore the coast of the coveted land. Tarik
                Abu Zara, the commander of this force, landed on the opposite side of the
                strait, and marched eighteen miles into the interior, to the castle and town of
                the traitor Count of Ceuta (July 710). His glowing report of the wealth of the
                country, decided Musa to send over a more powerful expedition under the command
                of his freedman, Tarik Ben Zayad. The miserable
                Julian supplied the means of transport. Five thousand Arabs and seven thousand
                Moors landed at the European pillar of Hercules, Mount Calpe, which became,
                henceforth, the Mountain of Tarik—Gebel
                  al Tarik, a name corrupted afterwards into the present appellation of
                Gibraltar (April, 711). Here Tarik formed a strongly entrenched camp, and
                gathered around him the friends of Julian, and also many Jews who were fired
                with the most deadly hatred against their Christian persecutors, that had, for
                more than a century, oppressed and hunted down this doomed people with a
                malignity such as religious fanaticism alone can excite and sustain. Counts Edeco and Theodomir, who had been commanded by the king to
                expel the intruders, were defeated with great slaughter; and a seasonable
                reinforcement from Africa swelled Tarik’s ranks to
                above 30,000 men. Roderic, conscious at last of the
                magnitude of the danger that threatened to overwhelm his throne and his people,
                gathered the flower of the Gothic nation around him, and marched at the head of
                100,000 men to encounter the foreign invaders. In the neighborhood of Cadiz, at
                Xerez de la Frontera, on the Guadelete,
                the hostile armies met. Three days were spent in desultory, though bloody
                fighting; on the fourth day, the actual battle commenced. When night spread her
                sable wings, and bade the slaughter cease for a while, more than half of the
                Saracen forces lay stretched dead on the ground they had come to conquer; and
                had not the vile defection of the most reverend father in God, the Archbishop
                of Toledo, and his two nephews, to whom Roderic’s generous or foolish (it may be read both ways) confidence had entrusted the
                most important post, broken the ranks of the Christians, the severed head of
                Musa’s freedman might have graced the battlements of Toledo. As it was, it took
                three days to scatter the remains of the Gothic army; and many a Saracen, and
                many a Christian traitor to his country, had to bite the dust before Tarik could
                pen his laconic “Praise be to Allah!—we have conquered”. (July 19-26, 711). The
                hapless king of the Goths was either slain in the fight or drowned in the
                waters of the Guadalquivir. The field of Xerez decided the fate of the Gothic
                monarchy; nearly the whole of Spain submitted to Tarik with such extraordinary
                rapidity, that the good old Musa, envious of his freedman’s success and fame,
                bade him arrest his victorious course, until he himself should arrive to gather
                the last and fairest fruits of the victory. Tarik, however, added Cordova and
                Toledo, the capital of the Gothic kingdom, to the list of his conquests, and
                advanced as far as the Bay of Biscay, where the failure of land at last
                compelled him to stop. Here he received an angry and imperious summons from his
                jealous chief; who had, meanwhile, himself crossed over from Africa, at the
                head of ten thousand Arabs and eight thousand Moors, and had taken Seville, and
                was besieging Merida. The latter city, though valiantly defended, was at last
                compelled to surrender. Midway between Merida and Toledo, Tarik met his chief,
                who received him with cold and stately formality, and demanded a strict account
                of the treasures of the conquered kingdom. The unfortunate lieutenant speedily
                found that Musa would not readily forgive his presumption of subduing Spain in
                the absence of his general: he saw himself ignominiously deprived of his
                command, and thrown into prison; and Musa carried his resentment so far, that
                he ordered the conqueror of Spain to be publicly scourged. Walid’s imperative commands compelled Musa to restore Tarik to his position; and the
                valiant man, who had been so ungenerously and unworthily treated by the jealous
                old chief, assisted him with his accustomed zeal, in achieving the conquest of
                the still unsubdued parts of the peninsula. At the
                end of 712, all resistance had ceased on the part of the Christians, with the
                exception of the valiant prince Theodomir, who defended himself several months
                longer in Orihuela, and obtained, at last, most
                favorable terms from Musa’s son, Abdelaziz, (5th
                April, 713); and the invincible Pelagius, or Pelayo, and Petrus,
                who, in the Asturian, Gallician,
                and Biscayan vallies, laid the foundation of a new
                Christian empire in Spain; destined, after a time, to renew the struggle and
                ultimately to expel the foreign invaders.
                
               
              Musa was a very old man—but though the coloring of his beard, and other
                little expedients of art, might fail to obliterate the physical ravages wrought
                by eighty-eight years of life, and by the fatigues and privations of fifty
                campaigns—yet the vigor of his mind, and the youthful ardor that fired his
                breast, remained unimpaired: and, like that marvelous old man of a later
                period, great Dandolo, the approach of ninety found
                him revolving enterprises of stupendous magnitude; aye, no less than the
                conquest of Gaul, Italy, Germany, and the Greek empire. He was preparing to
                pass the Pyrenees, and bid the kingdom of the Franks cease to exist, when an
                imperious command from Damascus, called both him and Tarik thither, to render
                an account of their proceedings to the commander of the faithful. Tarik obeyed;
                Musa delayed complying with the Khalif’s summons,
                until a second and still more peremptory message left the old chief no other
                alternative but obedience or open rebellion: and, as his own loyalty, or that
                of his troops, put the latter out of question, he set at once diligently about
                preparing for his return to Damascus. He confided the government of Spain to
                his son, Abdelaziz; that of Africa, to his son,
                Abdallah. Taking with him immense treasures in gold and silver, and, among
                others, the famous emerald table of Solomon, encircled with pearls and gems—a
                spoil of the Romans from the east, and which, it would appear, had fallen into
                the hands of Alaric, in the sack of Rome (410, AD); and attended by thirty
                Gothic princes, 400 nobles, and 18,000 male and female captives of humbler
                degree, he set out from Ceuta on his way to Damascus. At Tiberias,
                in Palestine, he received a private message from Suleiman, or Soliman, the
                brother and presumptive heir of Walid, informing him
                that the Khalif was dying, and commanding him, as he valued Soliman’s friendship, to reserve his triumphal entry into Damascus for the inauguration
                of the new reign.
                
               
              Musa, who might deem Soliman’s anger less
                dangerous than the resentment of the Khalif should he recover, disregarded the
                injunction, and pursued his march to Damascus, where he arrived just in time to
                afford the dying Walid the gratification of beholding
                the spoils of Africa and of Spain, soon after which, the most powerful of the Khalifs bowed his head to the stroke of the mighty master
                of kings and emperors (October, 714).
                
               
              His successor, Soliman, was an able and energetic prince, but of a
                despotic and ruthless disposition. Musa was arraigned at the judgment seat of
                the new Khalif, for abuse of power and disobedience to orders. The unworthy
                treatment which the victor of Xerez had suffered at the hands of his jealous
                chief, was avenged by a similar indignity inflicted upon the latter: the veteran
                commander was publicly scourged, and then kept waiting a whole day before the
                palace gate, till the mercy' of Soliman accorded him a sentence of exile to
                Mecca. He was, moreover, adjudged to pay to the public treasury, a fine of
                200,000 pieces of gold. Afraid lest the sons of the despoiled and insulted old
                man, should attempt to avenge the injuries of their father, the worthy son of Abd-el-Malek secretly dispatched
                to Africa and Spain, decrees commanding the extermination of Musa’s family;
                and, by a refinement of cruelty worthy of a Caligula, Caracalla, or Justinian
                II, he had the head of Abdelaziz presented to the
                bereaved father, with an insulting question, whether he knew the features of
                the rebel? “I know his features”, exclaimed the hapless old man, in a paroxysm
                of grief and indignation; “he was loyal and true. May the same fate overtake
                the base authors of his death”. Musa’s death, a few weeks after, of the
                anguish of a broken heart, spared Soliman an additional crime.
                
               
              The victor of Xerez fared but little better than his ancient commander;
                though, indeed, he was not made to expiate by death, imprisonment, or exile,
                the great services which he had rendered his country. Catibah,
                who had every reason to dread a similar fate as Musa’s and Tarik’s,
                rose in arms against the jealous tyrant of Damascus, and had the good fortune
                to meet with a glorious death on the battle field.
                
               
              Soliman resolved to render his reign famous by the overthrow of the
                Greek empire, and the conquest of Constantinople. His preparations, both by
                land and sea, were made on a gigantic scale. His brother, the redoubtable
                Moslemah, invaded Asia Minor at the head of 70,000 foot and 60,000 horse, with
                an immense train of camels, (716). The city of Tyana fell into the hands of the Moslems, and Amorium was closely besieged by them.
                The troops in Amorium were commanded at the time by General Leo, a native of Isauria. The original name of this remarkable man, was Konon; his father had come over from Asia Minor to Thrace,
                and had settled as a grazier there. He must have
                acquired considerable wealth in that lucrative business, since he could afford
                a gift of 600 sheep to the Imperial camp, to procure for his son admission into
                the guards of Justinian. The personal strength of the young soldier, and his
                dexterity in all martial exercises attracted the notice of the emperor, who
                speedily advanced him to the higher grades of military rank. Anastasius II
                confided to him the command of the Anatolian legions, and it was in this
                capacity that he defended Amorium against the Saracens. One of those sudden
                revolutions so frequent in the Byzantine court, compelled Anastasius to hand
                over the sceptre to an obscure officer of the
                revenue, who assumed the name of Theodosius III. General Leo refused to
                acknowledge the new emperor, and managed so skillfully, that not only did the
                troops under his command invest him with the imperial purple, but the Arabs, it
                would appear, accorded him and his army free and undisturbed departures from
                Amorium. He marched upon Constantinople, and Theodosius seeing himself in
                danger of being abandoned by the very troops who had so recently exalted him,
                willingly resigned to the hands of the general and emperor of the Oriental
                troops, the sceptre which, moreover, he had accepted
                with extreme reluctance only. He was permitted to retire with his son to the
                shelter of a monastery, where he had ample time to paint golden letters, an
                occupation which marvelously suited the natural indolence of his disposition.
                
               
              Leo, third of the name, who figures in history usually as the Isaurian, or the Iconoclast, was fully aware of the intention of the Arabs to
                attempt the reduction of Constantinople; he, therefore, made every preparation
                which military experience could suggest, or engineering skill devise, to give
                them a fitting reception. In July, 717, after the reduction of Pergamus,
                Moslemah transported his army from Asia to Europe, across the Hellespont or
                Dardanelles, at the most narrow part of the passage (from Abydos to Sestos);
                and thence, wheeling his troops round Gallipoli, Heraclea, and the other
                Thracian cities of the Propontis, or Sea of Marmara,
                he invested Constantinople on the land side. An offer made by the Greeks, to
                purchase the withdrawal of the besieging forces by the payment of a piece of
                gold for each inhabitant of the city, was contemptuously rejected; and Moslemah
                pushed on the operations of the siege with the greatest vigor, but without any
                corresponding success, the Isaurian repelling every attack with a bravery and
                determination, such as the Saracens had but little expected to see displayed by
                the apparently effete Greeks. Moslemah’s hopes were swelled high, however, by
                the arrival of the navies of Syria and Egypt, to the number of 1800 vessels,
                with 50,000 men on board. The Saracen commander fixed a night for a general
                assault by land and sea, and proudly boasted that by the morning the city
                should be his. When that morning came, the Greek fire had done its work; and
                scarce a vestige remained of the proud fleet, or of those who had manned it;
                and ten thousand Arabs and Persians slain, bore witness how fiercely Moslemah
                had assaulted the defenses of Byzantium, and how bravely and vigorously the
                Isaurian and his gallant troops had repulsed the hostile multitudes. From this
                check, Moslemah essayed in vain to recover: he became soon painfully conscious
                that the conviction of invincibility, which had hitherto so materially
                contributed to the great successes of the Saracen arms, was, if not altogether
                destroyed, at least considerably shaken. His assaults were now repulsed with
                apparent ease almost, and all his attempts at surprises were defeated by the
                ever watchful Isaurian. One hope still remained to restore the ancient
                supremacy of the Moslem arms: Khalif Soliman had gathered a formidable host of
                Arabians, Persians, and Turks, and was preparing to lead them to his brother’s
                assistance. The eyes of both the besiegers and the besieged were anxiously
                turned towards the Khalif’s camp near Chalcis (or Kinnisrin) in Syria; and Leo was endeavoring, by gifts and
                promises, to attract an army of Bulgarians from the Danube to pit them against
                the Saracens; and thus, perchance, to free the Byzantine empire from all
                danger, by the mutual destruction of its Barbarian foes. But it so happened
                that the Commander of the Faithful could not command his appetite; a meal of
                two scores or so of eggs, and a matter of six or seven pounds of figs, followed
                up by a dessert of marrow and sugar, proved too much for even his well-seasoned
                stomach; he paid with his life the penalty of his gluttony (717). He had
                appointed his cousin, Omab Ben Abdelaziz,
                to succeed him in the caliphate.
                
               
              Omar, second of the name, was a most estimable man, but a very
                indifferent prince; much fitter, indeed, to be the head of a monastery of
                ascetics, than of a powerful empire. The first act of his reign was to order
                the cessation of the Syrian armaments, which might have been a wise measure,
                had it been accompanied by the recall of Moslemah and his forces from the siege
                of Constantinople. His neglect of the latter measure entailed upon the
                unfortunate natives of the sultry climes of Egypt and Arabia, the unspeakable
                hardships of a most severe winter, passed in a frozen camp. In spring (718), he
                made an effort to relieve their wants, and to fill up the gaps which cold,
                famine, and disease had made in the ranks of the besieging army. Two numerous
                fleets were sent on this errand, one from Alexandria, the other from the ports
                of Africa. They succeeded, indeed, in landing the stores and reinforcements,
                but they found it as vain to contend against the Greek fire, as the armada
                which, the year before, had so proudly threatened to erase the Roman name from
                among the nations. Meanwhile, the Bulgarians had been bribed into an alliance
                with the Greek emperor, and these savage auxiliaries proved formidable
                antagonists to the exhausted and half-starved Asiatics.
                Still the intrepid Moslemah was not dismayed, and although he was compelled to
                relinquish all further attempts upon the defenses of the city, he defeated, on
                his part, all attacks made on his camp: until, at length, Khalif Omar sent him
                the welcome order to raise the siege, (August, 718). The retreat of the Arabian
                forces was effected without delay or molestation; but of the fleet, tempests
                destroyed what the fire of Callinicus had spared, and
                of 700 vessels that had proudly sailed forth, five only returned to the port of
                Alexandria, to tell the sad tale of the disastrous loss of their companions.
                Byzantium was saved, and the victorious Isaurian found himself at liberty to
                prepare for his meditated warfare against canvas, wood, brass, and marble.
                
               
              The good and pious Omar distinguished his reign chiefly by the abolition
                or “repeal” of the curse against Ali and his adherents which had for nearly
                sixty years been daily pronounced from the pulpits (719). By this act of simple
                justice, and by his somewhat hasty and incautious attempts to reform the
                fearful abuses which had crept into the administration of the empire under his
                predecessors, he excited the determined hostility of his own family, and of the Vizirs and high officers of state. A dose of poison
                removed him (720).
                
               
              His successor, Yezid II, had none of his virtues, but most of the vices
                of his other predecessors of the line of Ommiyah. It was in the reign of this
                prince, and in that of his successor, that the family Hashem, in two of its
                branches, viz. the Alides, or Fatimites, i.e. the descendants of Ali and
                Fatima, and the Abassides, that is the descendants of
                Abbas, the uncle of the prophet, began to urge their claims to the throne of
                the Khalifs. Indeed, Mohammed, the great grandson of
                Abbas, was secretly acknowledged as the true commander of the Faithful, by a
                considerable body of the inhabitants of Chorasan, and
                his son Ibrahim was even enabled to hoist the black flag of the Abassides in that province; the gloomy banner was
                triumphantly borne onward by Abu Moslem, the intrepid and invincible champion
                of the Abassides, the Kingmaker of the East, but, who
                was fated at last, like the English King-maker, to experience the usual
                gratitude of princes. From the Indus to the Euphrates, the East was convulsed
                by the fearful struggle between the white and the black factions, and the
                fairest provinces of Asia were deluged with blood to void the ancient quarrel
                between Ommiyah and Hashem, and to decide which of two equally vile races of
                despots had the letter right to trample on God’s fair creation. The struggle
                terminated for a time in 750, with the overthrow and almost total extirpation of
                the Ommiades—but of this hereafter.
                
               
              Yezid died in 722 or 723, of grief for the death of a favorite
                concubine. He was succeeded by his brother Hesham, a
                prince not altogether destitute of good qualities. Hesham had to contend against the Fatimite Zeid, the
                grandson of Hassan, who was, however, speedily overcome, and had to pay with
                his life the penalty of his ambition. The struggle against the more successful Abassides has been mentioned in the preceding paragraph.
                
               
              After Musa’s departure from Spain, and the murder of his son Abdelaziz, Ajub was proclaimed by
                the Arabian and Moorish troops, governor of the Spanish peninsula; he fixed his
                residence at Cordova. Under him and his more immediate successors numerous
                colonies came over to Spain from various parts of the Saracen dominions in Asia
                and Africa; of these the royal legion of Damascus was planted at Cordova; that
                of Emesa at Seville; that of Chalcis at Jaen; that of
                Palestine at Algeciras and Medina Sidonia. The
                Egyptian bands were permitted to share with the original conquerors their
                establishments of Murcia and Lisbon. The immigrants from Yemen and Persia were
                located round Toledo, and in the inland country; and ten thousand horsemen of
                Syria and Irak, the children of the purest and most noble Arabian tribes,
                settled in the fertile seats of Grenada.
                
               
              Ajub’s successor in the
                government of Spain, El Horr Ben Abderrahman resolved to annex to the dominions under his sway the Gallic province of
                Septimania or Languedoc, of which the eastern part, with Narbonne and Carcassone, was still remaining in the hands of the
                Visigoths; the western part, Aquitaine and Toulouse having been severed from
                the Gothic kingdom in 608, by Clovis. But he was defeated and driven back by
                the Christians; in consequence of the ill-success of his operations, the Khalif
                removed him from the command, and named El Zama governor in his stead. That
                bold and skillful general speedily succeeded in reducing the whole of the Narbonnese province (720); whence he marched into
                Aquitaine, and laid siege to Toulouse. Here he found a more formidable foe to
                encounter—the Franks, who were ultimately to check the further advance of Islam
                and its followers into the fairest provinces of Europe. The history of that
                nation, and of its successful leader against the Saracen invaders, forms the
                subject of the second part of this volume.
                
               
              
                 
               
              
                 
               
              PART II
                
               
              THE FRANKS.
                
               
              
                 
               
              CHAPTER I.
                
               
              The Frank confederacy.—Clovis, the founder of the
                Frank monarchy
                
               
              
                 
               
              A great deal of labor and ingenuity has been wasted in futile endeavors
                to trace the origin of a distinct Frank nation; however, after exhausting every possible means of research, and
                every probable and improbable suggestion of fancy, the most rational writers
                are now agreed in looking upon the supposed existence of a distinct Frank
                nation as a myth, and in believing that the name of Franks or Freemen was
                assumed, most probably about the middle of the third century after Christ, by a
                league of several Germanic nations, of whom the most important were the Sicambrians and the Catti. The
                former constituted, with the Bructeri, the Chamavians, the Chattuarii, and
                perhaps also part of the Batavians, the branch of the confederacy; towards
                the end of the third century their settlements extended along the eastern bank
                of the Rhine, from the Lippe down to the mouth of the
                great German river; they occupied also the island of the Batavians, and the
                land between the Rhine and Meuse, and down to the Scheld.
                From the settlement of the Sicambrians on the Yssel or Sala, this branch of the
                confederacy received the name of the Salian Franks. The Catti,
                the Ambsivarians, and some other tribes, (including
                perhaps even the Hermunduri, or Thuringians?)
                constituted the upper branch of the confederacy.
                
               
              The upper Franks extended their settlements from the lands between the
                Mein and Lippe gradually along both banks of the
                Rhine, from Mayence to Cologne; and, although
                repeatedly driven back by the Romans, they ultimately retained possession of
                the left bank of the river; whence they were also called Liparian or Ripuarian Franks (from the Latin ripa, bank,
                shore).
                
               
              The Franks repeatedly invaded Gaul, more particularly in the reigns of
                Valerian  (253—260), and of Gallienus (260—268); and though the Romans boast of
                numerous victories achieved at the time against them, under the leadership of Posthumus, the general of Valerian, but who afterwards
                usurped the empire in Gaul, yet it is certain that the Franks not only carried
                their devastations from the Rhine to the foot of the Pyrenees, but numbers of
                them actually crossed these mountains, and ravaged Spain during twelve years;
                when they had exhausted that unfortunate country, they seized on some vessels
                in the ports of Spain, and crossed over to the coast of Africa, where their
                sudden appearance created the utmost consternation. The Emperor Probus defeated the Franks in 277, and transported a colony
                of them to the sea-coast of Pontus, where he established them with a view of
                strengthening the frontier against the inroads of the Alani.
                But impelled by their unconquerable love of country and freedom, they seized on
                a number of vessels in one of the harbors of the Euxine, sailed boldly through
                the Bosphorus and the Hellespont, and, cruising along the coast of the
                Mediterranean, made frequent descents upon the coasts of Asia, Greece, and
                Africa, and actually took and sacked the opulent city of Syracuse, in the
                island of Sicily; whence they proceeded to the Columns of Hercules, where they
                made their way into the Atlantic, and coasting round Spain and Gaul, reached
                the British Channel, sailed through it, and landed ultimately in safety, and
                richly laden with spoil, on the Batavian shore.
                
               
              In 287, the Menapian Carausius,
                who usurped the imperial purple in Britain, granted to the Franks the island of
                the Batavians, and the land between Meuse and Scheld.
                Constantius (293), and Constantine (313), expelled them from these provinces;
                the Ripuarians also felt the heavy hand of Constantine, and of his son Crispus; the latter expelled them for a time from the left
                bank of the Rhine. But Julian found both the Salians and the Ripuarians in their old places; and, though successful against both
                (357 and 358), contented himself with the partial expulsion of the Ripuarians
                and the Chamavians, leaving the Sicambrians in quiet possession of the island of the Batavians, and the extensive district
                of Brabant, which they had occupied, on condition that they should henceforth
                hold themselves subjects and auxiliaries of the Roman empire. However, the
                expelled tribes soon made their reappearance on the banks of the Rhine, and, at
                the end of the fourth century, the Pranks had regained complete possession of
                their old quarters.
                
               
              Stilicho, the great minister and general of the contemptible Honorius,
                made it one of the first acts of his administration to secure the alliance of
                the warlike Franks against the enemies of Rome (395). He succeeded so well, it
                would appear, that the Franks actually handed over to the discretion of his
                justice, one of their kings or dukes, Marcomir, who
                was accused of having violated the faith of treaties; the accused prince was
                exiled to Tuscany, his brother Sunno, who attempted
                to avenge the insult which he deemed had been put upon the nation by this
                degradation of the dignity of one of its chiefs, met with a harsher fate at the
                hands of his own countrymen : he was slain by them; and the princes whom
                Stilicho had appointed, were cheerfully acknowledged. The fact that Stilicho
                himself was of German (Vandalian) extraction, may
                account in some degree for this extraordinary subserviency of the Franks to the will and wishes of the master of the Western Empire. On
                this occasion, the Franks had engaged to protect the province of Gaul against
                invasion from the side of Germany. An opportunity of proving their sincerity
                and fidelity to Rome, or perhaps rather to the great minister who had made the
                treaty of alliance with them, offered in the year 406, when the confederated
                nations of the Vandals, the Alani, the Suevi, and the Burgundians, were
                moving in a body to the Rhine with the intention of invading Gaul; and most
                honestly and valiantly indeed did the Franks acquit themselves of the duty
                undertaken by them. It so happened that the Vandals were the first to make
                their appearance on the bank of the river; proudly relying on their numbers
                they attempted to force the passage, without awaiting the coming up of the
                other confederated nations. They paid the penalty of their rashness; twenty
                thousand of them were slain, among them their king, Godigisclus;
                and the opportune arrival of the Alani, whose
                squadrons trampled down the infantry of the Franks, alone saved the nation of
                the Vandals from total destruction. Attacked by the combined forces of the
                confederates, the Pranks were at last compelled to give way. On the 31st
                December, 406, the Suevi, the Alani,
                the Vandals, and the Burgundians, crossed the frozen
                Rhine without further opposition, and thus entered the defenseless provinces of
                Gaul, where the Burgundians formed a lasting
                settlement, the other nations of the confederacy proceeding subsequently
                further on to Spain and Lusitania.
                
               
              History leaves us in the dark as to the period when the Franks first
                submitted to the sway of hereditary princes; but this much seems certain, that
                it must have been long before the time of Pharamond; and also that their longhaired
                kings did not derive the name of Merovingians from Meroveus,
                the grandson of Pharamond, but either from some more ancient Meroveus; or perhaps from Merve,
                the name which the Meuse receives after its union with the Waal (an arm of the
                Rhine); or from the same name of a castle near Dortrecht,
                supposed to have been the family seat of the Frankish kings.
                
               
              It would appear that Pharamond, the son of Marcomir,
                was elevated on the buckler, about 410, and that his son Clodion succeeded him in 428. It is somewhat doubtful whether these two kings held sway
                over the Ripuarians as well as over the Salians, or
                even over all the nations which constituted the league of the latter. Clodion had his residence at Dispargun (Duisborch?),
                in Brabant, somewhere between Louvain and Brussels. Soon after his accession,
                this prince invaded Belgic Gaul, took Tournay and Cambray, and advanced as far as the river Somme. He was
                surprised and defeated in the plains of Artois, by Aetius, the general of the
                Western empire (430); but that astute politician deemed it the wiser course to
                secure the friendship of the powerful leader of the warlike Franks, and
                therefore conceded to him free possession of the conquered province. Clodion died about 448. He left two sons who disputed his
                succession. All we can gather from the very confused and contradictory accounts
                of this period, is that the younger of the two sons, whose name is not
                mentioned, was raised on the buckler by the Ripuarian,
                the elder, Mebvey or Meroveus,
                by the Salian Franks; and that the former joined Attila in his invasion of
                Gaul, and fought on the side of the Huns in the great battle of Châlons (451);
                whilst Meroveus, with his Salians joined the standard of Aetius, and combated on the side of the Romans and
                Visigoths.
                
               
              Mervey’s son, Childeric, offended the Franks by his excesses and his arbitrary
                proceedings: he was deposed by them, and was compelled to seek a refuge at the
                court of the King of the Thuringians, Bisinus or Basinus. The Franks having thus disposed of their king,
                proceeded to bestow the royal dignity upon Aegidius, the Roman master-general
                of Gaul, who, after the compelled abdication and the most suspicious death of
                the Emperor Majorian, in 461, had refused to acknowledge the successor forced
                upon the acceptance of the Roman Senate by the all-powerful Patrician Ricimer,
                the instigator of Majorian’s fall, and had assumed
                the sovereignty over the remnant of the Gallic province which still obeyed the
                Roman sway. However, a few years after, the Franks, who found the Roman system
                of taxation more oppressive and objectionable than any act of Childeric’s, recalled that prince, and, under his guidance,
                expelled the “tax-gatherers” (465). Aegidius acquiesced with a good grace in a
                change which he had not the power to oppose. Childeric had been most hospitably
                entertained by King Bisinus; but the hospitality
                extended to him by the wife of that monarch, Queen Basina,
                was, by all accounts, still more liberal than that shown to the interesting
                guest by her worthy husband. After Childeric’s restoration, Basina left her husband, and rejoined
                her lover: the fruit of this voluntary union was Clovis, who, at the age of
                fifteen, succeeded, by his father’s death, to the rule of that portion of the
                Salian territory, over which Childeric had held sway, and which was confined to
                the island of the Batavians, with the ancient dioceses of Tournay and Arras; for the custom of the Franks to divide the treasures and territories
                of a deceased duke or king equally among his sons, had had the natural effect
                to split the kingdom of Pharamond into several parts independent of each other.
                Clovis combined with an insatiable ambition, all the qualities requisite to
                satisfy that all-absorbing passion. His personal bravery was controlled and
                directed by cool and consummate prudence. He wielded the francisca (the battle-axe of the
                Pranks) with formidable strength and skill; and he did not hesitate, when
                occasion required, to make his own soldiers feel the weight of his arm and the
                precision of his aim. He subjected the barbarians whom he commanded to the
                strict rules of a severe discipline which he enforced with unbending rigor. A
                crafty and astute politician, he was endowed with the most essential requisites
                for success, patience and perseverance. In the pursuit and accomplishment of
                his ambitious designs, he trampled on every law of God and nature : no feeling
                of pity ever stayed, no fear of retribution ever restrained, his murderous
                hands. He was indeed the worthy progenitor of a line of princes fit to take the
                proudest place among the highest aristocracy of crime, to put to the blush the Neros, the Caligulas, the Domitians, the Caracallas, the Elagalalus of imperial Rome, and to rank with the Bourbons,
                the Hapsburgs and the Tudors. At the age of twenty, he made war upon Syagrius, the son of Aegidius, who had inherited from his
                father the city and diocese of Soissons, and whose sway was acknowledged also
                by the cities and territories of Rheims, Troyes, Beauvais and Amiens. In
                alliance with his cousin Ragnachar, King of the
                Franks of Cambray, and some other Merovingian
                princes, he defeated Syagrius at Soissons, and
                reduced in the brief space of a few months the remnant of the Roman dominion in
                Gaul, and which had survived ten years the extinction of the Western empire
                (486). Syagrius fled to Toulouse, where he flattered
                himself to find a safe asylum; but in vain: Alaric II, the son of the great Euric, was a minor, and the men who governed the kingdom of
                the Visigoths in his name, were but too readily intimidated by the threats of
                Clovis, and pusillanimously delivered up the hapless fugitive to certain death.
                
               
              A few years after (491), Clovis enlarged his dominions towards the east
                by the ample diocese of Tongres. In 493, he married
                the Burgundian princess Clotilda, who, in the midst
                of an Arian court, had been educated in the Nicean faith. Clotilda’s endeavors to convert her husband to
                Christianity were not very successful at first, though he consented to the
                baptism of his first-born son; the sudden death of the infant, which the
                ignorant and superstitious Pagan was inclined to attribute to the anger of his
                gods, had well-nigh proved fatal to any further attempt at conversion; still
                the beauty and blandishments of the pious queen succeeded at last in overcoming
                the scruples and apprehensions of her husband, and gaining his consent to a
                repetition of the experiment: this time the infant survived, and Clovis began
                to listen with greater favor to the exhortations of his Christian spouse.
                
               
              In the year 496, the Alemanni, who occupied both banks of the Rhine,
                from the source of that river to its conflux with the Mein and the Moselle, and had spread themselves over the modern
                provinces of Alsace and Lorraine, invaded the territories of Sigebert, the king
                of the Ripuarian Franks, who had his seat at Cologne.
                Sigebert, unable to resist the invaders single-handed, invoked the powerful aid
                of his cousin, Clovis, and the latter hastened at once to the rescue. He
                encountered the invaders in the plain of Tolbiac (Zulpich), about twenty-four miles from Cologne. A fierce
                battle ensued. For several hours it raged with unabated fury, without any
                decided advantage being gained by either party; at length the Franks gave way,
                and the Alemanni raised shouts of victory. Clovis saw his dream of power and
                ambition rapidly fading away; in his extremity he invoked the God of Clotilda and the Christians, to grant him the victory over
                his enemies, which service he vowed duly to acknowledge, by consenting to be baptized.
                Resolved, however, to do his share also towards the achievement of the victory
                which he was imploring the Christian Lord of Hosts to vouchsafe him, he rallied
                his discomfited troops, and placing himself at their head, led them on again to
                the attack, and by his valor and conduct, succeeded in restoring the battle.
                The franciscas, and the heavy swords of the Franks,
                made fearful havoc in the hostile ranks; the king, and many of the most valiant
                chiefs of the Alemanni, were slain, and ere evening the power of one of the
                fiercest and most warlike nations of Germany, was annihilated. Pursued by the
                victorious Franks into the heart of their forests, the Alemanni were forced to
                submit to the yoke of the conqueror; some of their tribes fled to the territory
                of the Gothic king of Italy, Theodoric, who assigned them settlements in
                Rhaetia, and interceded, with his brother-in-law, in favor of the conquered
                nation.
                
               
              In his distress, Clovis had vowed to adore the God of the Christians, if
                He would succor him; the danger past, and the victory achieved, the perfidious
                Frank would gladly have made light of his vow, but for the incessant
                importunities of Clotilda, and of Remigius, the
                Catholic bishop of Rheims. On the day of Christmas in the same year, (496),
                Clovis was baptized in the Cathedral of Rheims with 3000 of his warlike
                subjects; and the remainder of the Salians speedily
                followed the example. As the kings of the Goths, Burgundians,
                and Vandals were Arians, and even the Greek emperor, Anastasius, was not quite
                free from the taint of heresy; the Bishop of Rome, Anastasius II, overjoyed at
                the conversion of the powerful king of the Franks to the Nicean faith, hailed the neophyte as the “Most Christian King”
                
               
              The conversion of Clovis to the Catholic faith stood him in excellent
                need in his schemes of further aggrandizement. His arms were henceforward
                supported by the favor and zeal of the Catholic clergy, more especially in the
                discontented cities of Gaul, under the sway of the Arian kings of the Visigoths
                and the Burgundians. The Armoricans,
                or Bretons, in the north-western provinces of Gaul, who had hitherto bravely
                and successfully resisted all attempts of the Pagan chief to conquer them, were
                now gradually induced to submit to an equal and honorable union with a
                Christian people, governed by a Catholic king (497—500); and the remnants of
                the Roman troops (most of them of barbarian extraction), also acknowledged the
                sway of Clovis, on condition of their being permitted to retain their arms,
                their ensigns, and their peculiar dress and institutions.
                
               
              Clotilda had never ceased to urge her husband to make war upon her uncle Gundobald, the
                murderer of her father. Her other uncle, Godegesil, had been permitted by his
                rapacious brother to retain the dependent principality of Geneva. But fearful
                lest Gundobald should treat him in the end the same as he had his other
                brothers, he lent a willing ear to the suggestions of his niece, and the
                tempting offers of the Frankish king, and entered into a secret compact with
                the latter to betray and abandon the cause of his brother on the first
                favorable opportunity. Hereupon Clovis declared war against the King of
                Burgundy, and invaded his territories: in the year 500 or 501, the armies of
                the Franks and the Burgundians met between Langres and Dijon. The treacherous desertion, at the
                decisive moment, of Godegesil and the troops of Geneva, saved Clovis from
                defeat. Apprehensive of the disaffection of the Gauls, Gundobald abandoned the
                castle of Dijon, and the important cities of Lyons and Vienna, to the king of
                the Franks, and continued his flight till he had reached Avignon; but here he
                made a stand, and defended the city with such skill and vigor, that Clovis
                ultimately consented to a treaty of peace, which made the king of Burgundy
                tributary to him, and stipulated the cession of the province of Vienna to
                Godegesil, as a reward for his treachery. A garrison of 5000 Franks was left at
                Vienna, to secure the somewhat doubtful allegiance of Godegesil, and also to
                protect the latter against the vengeance of his offended brother. But
                Gundobald, unscrupulous and truculent though he was in the pursuit of his
                grasping policy, was yet not lacking wisdom. As soon as the conclusion of the
                peace with Clovis had restored to him the remnant of his kingdom, he applied
                himself to gain the affections of his Roman and Gallic subjects, by the
                promulgation of a code of wise and impartial laws (502), and to conciliate the
                Catholic prelates by artful promises of his approaching conversion from the
                errors of the Arian heresy. Having strengthened his position, moreover, by
                alliances with the kings of the Ostrogoths and Visigoths, he suddenly invaded
                the territories which Clovis had compelled him to cede to his brother, and surprised
                Vienne and its Frankish garrison ere his brother was even fully aware of his
                hostile intentions. Godegesil sought refuge in a church; but the protection of
                the holy precincts availed him nought; he was struck
                down dead at the altar by his remorseless brother. The provinces of Geneva and
                Vienne were reunited to the Burgundian kingdom; the captive Franks were sent to
                the king of the Visigoths, who settled them in the territory of Toulouse.
                Clovis, who could now no longer rely upon the assistance of a traitor in the
                camp of Gundobald, deemed it the wiser course to submit to the altered state of
                affairs, and to content himself with the alliance and the promised military
                service of the King of Burgundy.
                
               
              Already before the Burgundian war, Clovis had cast his covetous eyes
                upon the fair provinces of the south of Gaul, which were held by Alaric II, the
                King of the Visigoths. Here, also, the disaffection of the Catholic Gauls and
                Romans promised the best chances of success. Some paltry border-squabble was
                eagerly laid hold of by Clovis to pick a quarrel with the King of the
                Visigoths, and war seemed at the time inevitable between the two nations; when
                Theodoric, Alaric’s father-in-law, interposed his good offices, and succeeded,
                by a well-timed threat of an armed intervention, in restraining the aggressive
                spirit of the Frankish King, (498). A personal interview was proposed between
                Clovis and Alaric; it was held on the border of the two states, in a small
                island of the Loire, near Amboise. The two kings met in right royal fashion:
                they embraced, feasted together, indulged in a profusion of protestations of
                mutual regard and brotherly affection, and parted full of smiles—and mutual
                hatred and distrust.
                
               
              Had Alaric pursued the same wise course as Gundobald, he might have
                found in the affection of the people under his sway, a safe shield against
                Frank aggression. But, unfortunately, the Arian could not forbear from
                inflicting upon his dissenting subjects, those petty acts of tyranny in which
                dominant sects delight, and which are always sure to create a deeper and more
                lasting disaffection than any act of political oppression. The Catholic clergy
                in Aquitaine laid their complaints against their Arian sovereign, before the
                Catholic King of the Franks; and besought the latter to come to the aid of his
                coreligionists, and free them from the yoke of their Gothic tyrants. Clovis
                eagerly seized the pretext. In a general assembly of the Frankish chiefs and
                the Catholic prelates held at Paris, he declared his intention not to permit
                the Arian heretics to retain possession any longer of the fairest portion of
                Gaul. Alaric did his best to prepare for the coming struggle; the army which he
                collected was much more numerous, indeed, than the military power which Clovis
                could bring against him; but, unfortunately, a long peace had enervated the
                descendants of the once so formidable warriors of the first Alaric. They were
                unable to sustain the fierce shock of the Franks, who totally overthrew and
                routed them in the battle of Vouglé, near Poitiers, in 507. Alaric himself fell
                by the hand of his rival; Angoulême, Bordeaux, Toulouse, submitted to the
                conqueror, and the whole of Aquitaine acknowledged his sway, (508); and he
                would have succeeded in driving the Visigoths beyond the Pyrenean mountains,
                had not the King of Italy thrown the shield of his power over the discomfited
                nation. The Franks and their Burgundian allies were besieging Arles and
                Carcassonne, when the valiant Hibbas, Theodoric’s
                general, appeared on the scene with a powerful and well-appointed army of
                Ostrogoths. He defeated the victors of Vouglé, and compelled the ambitious King
                of the Franks to raise the siege of the two cities, and to lend a willing ear
                to proposals of an advantageous peace. He then overthrew and slew the bastard Gesalic, who had usurped the throne of the Visigoths, to
                the exclusion of Alaric’s infant son, Amalaric. The latter was now proclaimed
                King of Spain and Septimania, under the guardianship of his grandfather,
                Theodoric: Clovis being permitted to retain possession of the land from the
                Cevennes and the Garonne to the Loire, whilst the Provence was annexed to the
                dominions of the King of Italy, who thus did not disdain despoiling his own
                grandson of one of the finest provinces of his kingdom.
                
               
              The Emperor Anastasius, overjoyed at the humiliation inflicted by Clovis
                upon the Goths, bestowed upon the King of the Franks the dignity and ensigns of
                the Roman consulship! (610); which, though in reality a mere empty title, yet
                invested that monarch, in the eyes of his Roman and Gallic subjects, with the
                prestige of Imperial authority.
                
               
              Clovis seeing himself thus in undisputed possession of the greater part
                of Gaul, thought the time had come to unite the several Frankish tribes into
                one nation, under his sceptre. But, knowing full well
                that his Franks would not follow him in an open war against his own kindred of
                the race of Pharamond, he coolly planned the assassination of the whole family.
                Sigebert, the king of the Ripuarians, had proved himself a most faithful ally of
                his Salian cousin; and in the last campaign against the Visigoths, he had sent
                to his aid a powerful contingent of his Ripuarians, under the command of his
                own son, Chloderic. Clovis excited the ambition and cupidity of the latter, and
                succeeded in persuading him to murder his own father; when the horrid deed was
                perpetrated, the wretched son, intent upon securing the powerful support of the
                Salian king, offered him part of the treasures of the murdered man. The fair
                cousin sent him word to keep his treasures, and simply to show them to his
                ambassadors, that he, Clovis, might rejoice in the prosperity of his cousin;
                but, when the assassin of his father had lifted up the heavy lid of one of the
                boxes, and was bending down to take out some of the precious articles which it
                held, he was slain in his turn by one of the ambassadors of Clovis. That most
                Christian king afterwards solemnly protested to the Ripuarians that Chloderic,
                the assassin of his father, had fallen by the hand of some unknown avenger, and
                that he, Clovis, was innocent of the death of either of them. “Surely”, he
                exclaimed, with well affected horror and indignation, “no one would dare to
                deem me guilty of that most horrible of all crimes, the murder of my own
                kindred”. The Ripuarians believed him, and acknowledged him their king, by
                raising him on a shield. The next victims were Chararic,
                the king of the Morinic Franks, in Belgium, and his
                son. Chararic, had refused his aid to Clovis, in the
                campaign against Syagrius; the fact had, indeed,
                occurred rather long ago, but still it answered the purpose of the unscrupulous
                son of Childeric. Chararic and his son, having fallen
                into his hands by the grossest treachery, were despoiled of their treasures and
                their long hair, and ordained priests. When the son, endeavoring to console his
                father, could not refrain from indignant invectives against the author of their
                misery, the pious king of the Salians calmly ordered
                both of them to be slain, as they had “dared to rebel against the will of the
                Most High!”. There remained still the family of the Cambray princes, consisting of three brothers, viz., Ragnachar, Richar, and Rignomer. The
                pretext in their case was that they still continued Pagans. Clovis bribed some
                of the chiefs of the tribe with spurious gold; they fell unawares upon Ragnachar and Richar, bound them,
                and delivered them into the hands of their “loving cousin”. Addressing the
                hapless Ragnachar, that monstrous villain exclaimed,
                “How dare you bring disgrace upon our noble family, by submitting to the
                indignity of bonds!”, and, with a blow of his battle-axe, he spared the
                wretched captive the trouble of a reply; then turning to the brother of the
                butchered man, “Hadst thou defended thy brother”, he
                cried, “they could not have bound him”; and an instant after, the blood and
                brains of the brothers had mingled their kindred streams on the weapon of the
                most Christian king. When the wretches who had betrayed their princes into the
                hands, of the assassin, came to complain that the price of their treachery had
                been paid in base coin, he told them, traitors deserved no better reward, and
                bade them be gone, lest he should feel tempted to avenge upon them the blood of
                his murdered relations.
                
               
              Rignomer was disposed of by private assassination, and Clovis might now exclaim: “At
                last I am king of the Franks”. The worthy bishop of Tours, the chronicler of
                this, and some of the following reigns of the Merovingians, whilst coolly
                relating these horrid crimes of his hero, piously informs us that success in
                all his undertakings was vouchsafed to Clovis by “the Most High, and that his
                enemies were delivered up into his hands, because he walked with a sincere
                heart in the ways of the Lord, and did that which was right in his sight!”.
                What a pity that this godly monarch was not permitted to walk a little longer
                in the ways of the Lord: an additional score or so of murders would surely have
                achieved canonization for him. But the most orthodox and most Christian king
                was suddenly called away from the scene of his glorious exploits; at the very
                time when he was revolving mighty schemes of further aggrandizement, and
                planning, as preliminary step, the assassination of Gundobald, the king of
                Burgundy, and of Theudes, the regent of Spain, (511).
                His four sons divided his kingdom between them; Theodoric, (Thierry) the
                eldest, received the Eastern part, Austrasia, (Francia orientalis), and also part of Champagne, and the
                conquests of Clovis south of the Loire; he established the seat of his
                government at Metz; Clodomir’s seat was at Orleans; Clotaire’s at Soissons; Childebert’s at Paris; the share of the latter was called Neustria or Neustrasia (Francia occidentalis), a
                name which was afterwards used to designate the whole of the territories
                occupied by the Franks between the mouths of the Rhine and the Loire, the
                Meuse, and the sea.
                
               
              It is not my intention to smear my pages with the blood and mire of the
                lives and acts of the Merovingian princes. We will content ourselves here with
                a brief glance at the principal events and incidents connected with the
                progress of the Frank empire during the two hundred years that intervene
                between the death of Clovis and the accession of Charles, afterwards surnamed
                Martel, as Mayor of the Palace.
                
               
              In the year 623, the three sons of Clotilda,
                invited by their unforgiving mother, invaded Burgundy, and attacked the son and
                successor of Gundobald, Sigismond, whose conversion
                to the Catholic faith has gained him, in the lying annals penned by the clerical
                historians of the period, the name of a saint and a martyr, though he had
                imbrued his hands in the blood of his own son, an innocent youth whom he had
                basely sacrificed to the pride of his second wife! Sigismond lost a battle and fell soon after into the hands of the sons of Clotilda, who carried him to Orleans, and had him buried
                alive together with his wife and two of his children—an excellent proof that
                they had not degenerated. Sigismond’s brother, Gondemar, defeated the invaders in the battle of Vienna,
                where Clodomir fell. This gave Gondemar a few years’
                respite, as the two brothers, Clotaire and Childebert, were busy sharing the
                inheritance of Clodomir. But, in 634, the brothers invaded Burgundy again; when Gondemar lost his crown and his liberty, and the fair
                Burgundian provinces became the patrimony of the Merovingian princes. In the
                year 530. Theodoric and Clotaire conquered and annexed the territories of the
                Thuringians, thus extending their dominion to the banks of the Unstrut. Rhaetia and Provence also fell into the hands of
                the successors of Clovis. Theudobald, the grandson
                and second successor of Theodoric, or Thierry, died in 554; as he left no heir,
                Clotaire and Childebert shared his dominions between them; Childebert’s death, in 658, without male heirs, left Clotaire in sole and undisputed
                possession of the Frankish empire, which now extended from the Atlantic and the
                Pyrenees to the Unstrut. After having added to the
                list of his crimes the murder of his son Chramus, and
                also of the wife and the two daughters of the latter. King Clotaire died in
                560. His kingdom was again divided between his four sons, Charibert, Guntram, Sigebert, and Chilperic; the eldest of the
                brothers, Charibert, died in 567. As he left no heir, his territories were divided
                between the three surviving brothers. But Chilperic was dissatisfied with his
                share, and this led to a series of civil wars, which terminated only in 613,
                when Clotaire II, the son of Chilperic and Fredegonda,
                reunited in his hands the entire empire of the Franks.
                
               
              It would be difficult to crowd a greater number of more appalling and
                atrocious crimes, within the short space of half a century, than were committed
                by the Merovingians, from the time of the death of Charibert up to the reunion
                of the empire under Clotaire II; the names of Chilperic, of Fredegonda,
                of Brunehilda, of Theuderic,
                and last, though not least, of the monster Clotaire (second of the name)
                deserve, indeed, prominent places in the great criminal calendar of the world’s
                history.
                
               
              
                 
               
              CHAPTER II
                
               
              CHARLES MARTEL—THE BATTLE OF TOURS.
                
               
              
                 
               
              When the Roman empire bad ceased to exist, the Frankish kings had, in
                imitation of the Roman rulers, begun to surround themselves with a court, and a
                great many high officers, and charges had been created, among the most
                important of which may be mentioned the office of Lord High Chancellor (archicancellarius, referendarius);
                Lord High Chamberlain, or High Treasurer (thesaurarius, camerarius); Master of the royal stables (marescalchus); Lord Justice (comes palatii);
                Steward of the royal household (senescalchus); and
                more particularly that of Mayor of the palace (praefectus palatii, or majordomus, or
                comes domus regiae). The
                functions of the latter officer had originally been confined to the general superintendence
                of the palace, and the administration of the royal domains; but had speedily
                been extended also to the command of the household troops. In the course of the
                domestic wars between the Merovingian princes, the mayors of the palace had
                gradually acquired a power and influence second only to that of the king; so
                that, after the assassination of Sigebert, in 575, Gogo,
                the then mayor of the palace of Austrasia, had actually been named regent
                during the minority of Sigebert’s son, Childebert. So
                powerful indeed had these domestic officers grown, that Clotaire II was
                positively forced to bind himself by oath to Warnachar,
                the mayor of the palace of Burgundy, to leave him for his life in undisturbed
                possession of his office; he was obliged also to acknowledge the learned and
                valiant Arnulf, the Austrasian, mayor of the palace,
                and subsequently—when that officer embraced the ecclesiastical profession, and
                became Bishop of Metz—the energetic Pepin of Landen as his representative with sovereign powers in Austrasia. Even when Clotaire
                had ceded the kingdom of Austrasia to his son Dagobert (622), Pepin continued
                to exercise almost unlimited sway in that part of the Frankish empire. After Clotaire’s death, in 623, Dagobert succeeded also to the
                Neustrian kingdom; and in 631, after his brother Charibert’s death, who had held some of the south-western provinces, he became sole king of
                France. He died in 638; he was a compound of sensuality and indolence; still
                his character and life were not stained with the horrible crimes perpetrated by
                his predecessors, and more particularly by his own father; he was the last of
                the descendants of Clovis, who exhibited even the faintest spark of that fierce
                and energetic spirit which made the founder of the Frank monarchy, however so
                abhorrent as a man yet respectable, and even great, as a king. Dagobert built
                and richly endowed the Church of St. Denys, which gained him the surname “The
                Great”, from a grateful clergy; but history has refused to register the
                ill-deserved epithet. Pepin of Landen died a year
                after his king (639). His son, Grimoald, deemed the power of his family already
                so firmly established, that, taking advantage of the tender age of Dagobert’s sons, Sigebert (second of the name in the list
                of the Merovingian kings), and Clovis (II), he attempted to deprive them of
                their father’s succession, and to place his own son (Childebert) on the throne;
                both father and son paid with their lives the failure of the ambitious plan.
                But the overthrow of Grimoald led simply to a change of persons; the power of
                the mayors of the palace remained undiminished, and from this time forward, the
                Merovingian kings were mere ciphers. “They ascended the throne without power,
                and sunk into the grave without a name”.  Sigebert died in 650; his brother Clovis six years after. One of the
                sons of the latter, Clotaire (III) succeeded to the Neustrian, another,
                Childeric (II) to the Austrasian part of the empire. After Clotaire’s death, in 670, the third brother, Theodoric, or Thierry (III), was for a short
                time king of Neustria; but he was speedily dispossessed by his brother
                Childeric (or to speak more correctly, his mayor of the palace was compelled to
                give way to Childeric’s mayor of the palace).
                Childeric was murdered in 673; when Thierry was reinstated in Neustria,
                Austrasia being given to Dagobert (II), a son of Sigebert II, but who had
                hitherto been kept out of his inheritance.
                
               
              After the death of Dagobert in 678, the Austrasians refused to submit to Thierry, the King of Neustria and Burgundy, or rather to
                his haughty mayor of the palace, Ebroin. Pepin d'Heristal, the grandson of Pepin of Landen,
                and his cousin, Martin, were at the head of the insurgent Austrasian nobility.
                Martin fell into the hands of Ebroin, and was killed. Ebroin himself was soon after assassinated, (682).
                His successor, Giselmar, defeated Pepin at Namur, but
                the Austrasian notwithstanding maintained his position. The Neustrian nobility,
                discontented with the rule of Giselmar’s successor, Berthar or Berchar, ultimately called
                Pepin to their aid.
                
               
              Berthar,
                and his puppet, Thierry, were defeated by the Austrasian ruler in the famous
                battle of Testry, near Péronne and St. Quentin, in
                687. Berthar was slain as he fled from the field of
                battle: and although the name of king was left to Thierry, he was compelled to
                acknowledge Pepin as perpetual, and hereditary Mayor of the Palace, in the
                three kingdoms of Neustria, Austrasia, and Burgundy, under the style and title
                of Duke and Prince of the Franks, (Dux et Princeps Francorum). Pepin
                was now, to all intents and purposes, the actual ruler of the Frankish
                empire—king in all but the name. The nominal sovereigns had, henceforth, a
                residence assigned them, which they dared not even quit without the sanction of
                their master; nay, even the paltry consolation of the pomp and glitter of
                royalty was not vouchsafed them—except once a year in the month of March, when
                the royal puppet was conducted in state in the old Frankish fashion, in a wagon
                drawn by two oxen, to the great annual assembly of the nation; to give audience
                to foreign ambassadors, or to receive plaints and petitions— and to place his
                organ of speech, for a time, at the disposal of the Mayor of the Palace, and
                give utterance to the replies or decisions of the real ruler of France. The
                assembly over, the “King” was reconducted to his
                residence or prison, where a feeble retinue and a strong guard insulted the
                fallen majesty of the house of Clovis. It would even appear that the civil list
                assigned to the “King”, was only a precarious grant, and that the nominal
                master of three kingdoms, was often left without the means of defraying the
                expenses of his “humble household”. The epithet of the “do-nothing kings”, (les rois fainéans) has been felicitously applied to the last
                princes of the Merovingian line. Besides Thierry III, (d. 621), three of them lived in the reign of Pepin of Heristal, viz: Clovis III, d. 695); Childebert III, (d. 711); and Dagobert III, all of them
                minors.
                
               
              Pepin was an able and energetic ruler; he restored in some measure the
                respect of the law. Liberal rewards secured him the allegiance of the nobility;
                munificent endowments to churches and monasteries, and the aid and
                encouragement which he gave to the Christian missionaries, who were endeavoring
                to convert the heathen Germans, gained him the favor and support of the clergy:
                his good sword put down the discontented; and last, though certainly not least,
                he deserved the grateful affection of the people by alleviating their burthens,
                and by protecting them, in some measure, against the despotic oppression of the
                nobility. The expulsion of some Christian missionaries from Friesland, gave
                Pepin a pretext for endeavoring to subject the Prisons to the Frankish sway. He
                invaded Friesland in 689, and defeated the Frison duke, or prince, Radbodus, at Dorestadt,
                or Dorsted; in consequence of which defeat, the
                latter was compelled to cede West Friesland to the Duke of the Franks; but all
                attempts to obtain the conversion of Radbodus to
                Christianity failed.
                
               
              In 697, a new war broke out between the Duke of the Franks and the
                Prince of the Frisons, in which the latter is stated
                to have been again defeated, and compelled to acknowledge, by the payment of an
                annual tribute, the supremacy of the Franks. It is added, also, that he gave
                his daughter in marriage to Pepin’s son Grimoald.
                
               
              Pepin of Heristal made also several
                expeditions, though, it would appear, with indifferent success only, against
                the Alemanni, the Thuringians, and the Bojoarii, or
                Bavarians, who had taken advantage of the internal dissensions and disorder of
                the Frankish empire, to shake off the yoke of their masters.
                
               
              In the beginning of the year 714, Pepin fell seriously ill, at his
                estate Jopila, on the Meuse, He sent for his only
                surviving (legitimate) son, Grimoald, whom he had made (after the death of his
                friend Nordbert) majordomus in Neustria, and (after the death of Drogo, another
                of his sons) Duke of Burgundy and Champagne, and whom he intended to name his successor
                in the government of the entire monarchy. But on his way to his father,
                Grimoald was assassinated at Liege, in the church of St. Lambert, by a Frison; at the instigation, it would appear, of some
                discontented nobles. He left an illegitimate infant son, Theudoald,
                or Theudebaud. Pepin was unfortunately persuaded by his wife, the ambitious
                Plectrudis, who expected to wield the government during the minority of her
                little grandson, to name this infant his successor, instead of either of his
                own two illegitimate sons (Charles and Childebrand),
                and of whom the latter, more especially, possessed his father’s great
                qualities, and that amount of physical and intellectual vigor indispensable to
                keep together and to rule over an empire composed of such heterogeneous and
                antagonistic elements, as the Frankish. Soon after this fatal step, which, we
                may safely assume the love of his country and of his glory, would never have
                permitted the aged ruler to take, had not his faculties been greatly impaired
                at the time by long illness and by the bitter grief of his son’s death, Pepin
                of Heristal died on the 16th of December, 714.
                
               
              He had scarcely departed life when Plectrudis, who dreaded the aspiring
                genius of Charles, had the latter seized, and confined in the city of Cologne.
                She now deemed herself in safe possession of the government; but she was soon
                awakened from her ambitious dream. The Neustrians were indignant that they should thus be handed over to the sway of a child and
                to the rule of a woman: they could bear infant-kings, indeed, but they refused
                to put up with an infant mayor of the palace. They, therefore, made Raganfried,
                a powerful Neustrian noble, their mayor of the palace, and prepared to resist
                by force of arms, any attempt which Plectrudis might make to compel their
                submission. The widow of Pepin showed indeed that, if she had had the ambition
                to seize the sceptre, she had also the spirit to
                wield, and the requisite energy to defend it.
                
               
              She collected a powerful army, and sent the puppet-King Dagobert (III),
                and his infant minister Theudebaud, with it against, what she was pleased to
                call, the Neustrian rebels. But the fortune of war declared against her: the
                Austrasian forces were totally routed by Raganfried, and “King” Dagobert fell
                into the hands of the Neustrian mayor of the palace. The infant on whose tiny
                shoulders Pepin’s ill-judged partiality, or uxoriousness,
                had thrown the burthen of three kingdoms, died soon after this reverse (715). Radbodus took advantage of the position of affairs, to reannex West Friesland to his dominions; and, in
                conjunction with the Saxons, invaded the Frankish territories from the north
                east, whilst the Merovingian princes of Aquitaine ravaged them in the south
                west; the Alemanni and the Bavarians threw off the Frankish yoke, and resumed
                their ancient independence. Matters were looking dark indeed for the house of
                the Pepins, and though Mistress Plectrudis most
                gallantly braved the storm, her utmost efforts could have availed but little
                against such a multitude of foes, had not Pepin’s son, Charles, meanwhile found
                his way out of the prison to which the ambition of his father’s widow had
                confined him.
                
               
              Charles, who was destined afterwards to play so important a part in
                history, was, at this time, about 25 years of age (he was born in 690). Nature
                had been most bountiful to him: tall even among the tall nation of the Franks,
                of a most commanding figure, and of a compact and beautifully symmetrical
                frame, he might be said to present in his physical conformation a compound of Hercules
                and Antinous; his features were regular and
                expressive, and the lightning glance of his large blue eyes reflected, as in a
                mirror, the energy of his mind and the vigor of his intellect. He possessed
                enormous bodily strength combined with surprising agility. The remembrance of
                his great father, and his own manly beauty and grace, gained him the hearts of
                the Austrasians; and he soon found himself at the
                head of a formidable body of troops, with which he proceeded first to attack
                the Frisons, but with rather indifferent success, it
                would appear, as, we find Radbodus and his Frisons soon after laying siege to Cologne, in conjunction
                with the Neustrians under Raganfried. Plectrudis,
                however, purchased the retreat of the besieging forces; and the Frisons and Neustrians having
                separated again, Charles fell upon the latter at Ambleva.
                But, although he exhibited all the qualities of a great general, and that the
                fearful execution which his heavy sword did in the hostile ranks struck terror
                into the foe, and made ever after his war-cry “Here Charles and his sword”,
                ring as the prelude of inevitable defeat on the affrighted ears of his enemies:
                yet the superiority of numbers was too great on the side of Raganfried, and the
                battle terminated at last rather in favor of the Neustrians than otherwise (716). Soon after his capture by the Neustrians,
                Dagobert had passed from his royal prison to the grave (715), and another
                unlucky scion of the race of Pharamond, the Monk Daniel, had been dragged from
                the repose of his cloistral cell, to figure, as Chilperic II, in the line of
                the “titular” kings of France. Charles would have acquiesced in the
                arrangement, had not Raganfried steadily refused to acknowledge him as Duke of
                Austrasia; he determined, therefore, to appeal once more to the decision of
                arms. A fierce and sanguinary battle was fought between the Austrasians and the Neustrians, at Vincy,
                between Arras and Cambray (21st of March, 717) : and
                this time, Charles’ valor and generalship were rewarded with a brilliant and
                decisive victory, which made him master of the country up to Paris. But, wisely
                declining to pursue his conquests in this quarter, and to court perhaps the
                chance of a defeat far away from his resources, he led his victorious army
                swiftly back to the Rhine, and compelled Plectrudis to give up to him the city
                of Cologne, and his paternal treasures; which latter he turned to excellent
                account in increasing the number and efficiency of his forces. Plectrudis took
                refuge in Bavaria.
                
               
              Though the Merovingian princes had lost all real power in the state, yet
                there still attached to the name of the family a prestige in the eyes of the
                nation, which rendered the continued existence of “Kings” chosen from among the
                descendants of Clovis, a matter of political necessity.
                
               
              Charles wisely resolved therefore, to put himself in this respect on
                equal terms with Raganfried; and he accordingly invested with the insignia of a
                sham royalty another scion of the long-haired line, Clotaire, fourth of that
                name. An expedition against the Saxons, to chastise them for their predatory
                incursions into the Frankish territories, was eminently successful, and the son
                of Pepin displayed his victorious banner on the Weser (718); but receiving
                information that Raganfried had made an alliance against him with the valiant
                Eudes, Duke of Aquitaine (of Merovingian descent), and dreading lest the united
                power of the two might prove too strong for him, he resolved to attack the
                former before a junction of the allied forces could be effected, and accordingly
                led his army with his accustomed celerity from the banks of the Weser to the
                banks of the Seine. After totally routing Raganfried at Soissons (719), he
                compelled Paris to surrender. The wretched Chilperic sought refuge with his
                ally, Eudes. Charles marched on to the Loire, and was preparing to carry his
                arms into Aquitaine, when the death of Clotaire led to an arrangement with
                Chilperic, who, acknowledging Charles as majordomus in the three kingdoms, was permitted to continue in the enjoyment of his
                fictitious royalty. In the same year still (719), Charles was delivered by
                death from another of his opponents, Radbodus, the
                brave duke of the Frisons. He promptly took advantage
                of this event to re-annex West Friesland to the Frankish dependencies, and to
                induct Bishop Willibrod into his see of Utrecht, from
                which Radbodus had kept him excluded.
                
               
              In the year 720, Chilperic was gathered to his fathers; Charles replaced
                him by a child of the Merovingian race, taken from the monastery of Lala (Thierry IV). In 721 Charles crossed the Rhine at the
                head of a powerful army, to subject the Alemanni, the Bavarians, and the
                Thuringians again to the Frankish sway. As he saw in the conversion of these
                stubborn nations to Christianity one of the most efficient means to secure
                their allegiance in future, he had himself attended by Winifred, and other
                missionaries, who, now that they were supported by the arms of the Frankish
                chief, were brilliantly successful in their missionary labors, in some of the
                very places among others, where they had on former occasions been treated with
                derision and contumely, or whence they had been forcibly expelled.
                
               
              In 722, Charles drove the Saxons from the Hassian (Hessian) district which they had invaded; but when he followed them into their
                own country, with the intention of subjecting them altogether to his sway, he
                experienced such determined resistance that he wisely resolved to leave them
                alone. In 725, he compelled the Suabians and
                Alemanni, and their duke, Lantfried, to acknowledge
                his sovereignty.
                
               
              Since 553, after the extinction of the Gothic kingdom of Italy, the Agilolfingian dukes of Bavaria “enjoyed” the “protection”
                of the Frankish kings; although, whenever the dissensions among the members of
                that amiable family, or the contentions among the mayors of the palace,
                afforded a fitting opportunity, the Bavarians invariably took occasion to
                “thank” them for their protection, and to decline further favors. But the
                persuasive force of Pepin of Heristal, and of his son
                Charles, fully succeeded in the end in restoring the amicable relations between
                the two nations, to the old footing. Duke Theodo II,
                a most pious prince, who greatly favored and furthered the extension of
                Christianity in his dominions, committed the capital blunder so common at the
                time (and so natural withal)—to divide his dominions between his three sons, Theodoald (Theudebaud), Theudebert,
                and Grimoald. Theudebaud had married Pilitrudis, the
                fair daughter of Plectrudis; he died in 716, and his brother Grimoald deemed it
                no harm to marry the beautiful widow of the departed; but Saint Corbinian happened to think very differently; and his
                zealous exhortations, and the fearful picture which he drew of the pains and
                penalties that awaited him who should have committed, what the holy man was
                pleased to call, “incest”, frightened poor Duke Grimoald into giving his
                consent to a divorce from his dearly beloved wife. Mistress Pilitrudis,
                however, was by no means pleased with the pusillanimous conduct of her second
                husband; and the exile of the meddlesome ecclesiastic speedily showed him, that
                a woman offended may prove more than a match even for a priest and a saint. Theudebert also died (724), leaving behind a son, named Hugibert, and a daughter, named Guntritdis,
                and who was married to Luitprand, King of the
                Lombards. After his second brother’s death, Grimoald seized upon his dominions
                to the prejudice of his nephew. Hugibert, finding all
                his remonstrances disregarded, claimed the
                intercession of the Duke of the Franks, in his capacity as Protector of
                Bavaria. Charles accepted the offer of mediator between the contending parties;
                and called upon Grimoald to deliver up to Hugibert the provinces which he was unjustly withholding from him. Grimoald refusing,
                Charles entered Bavaria at the head of his army, and the Bavarian duke was
                defeated and slain in the first battle (725). Hugibert now succeeded to the government of all Bavaria with the exception, however, of
                a large slice of the Northern provinces, which he ceded to Charles in reward of
                his services. The unfortunate Pilitrudis was
                despoiled by the “magnanimous” victor of all she possessed, except a mule, or
                donkey, to carry her to Pavia to her relations. A new irruption of the Saxons,
                called Charles again to the Weser; he defeated and drove back the invaders
                (729). Whilst he was thus occupied on the Saxon frontier, the Suabians and Alemanni took advantage of his absence, to
                throw off once more the yoke of the Franks. Charles confounded them, however,
                by the rapidity of his movements; he appeared on the Mein before they were well
                aware that he had left the banks of the Weser. The battle which ensued,
                terminated in the total defeat of the “rebels”; Duke Lantfried was slain, and the humbled nation submitted to the rule of the conqueror (730).
                
               
              We are now approaching the most important and most interesting period in
                the life and career of Charles, viz., his encounter with the Saracens; we will,
                therefore, resume here the thread of the history of the Moslem invasion, broken
                off at page 88, where we left the Saracen general, El Zama, laying siege to
                Toulouse. A branch of the Merovingian family, descended from Clotaire’s (II) younger son Charibert (631), had
                established the independent duchy of Aquitaine in the south of France. At the
                time of the Arab invasion, Eudes (Eudo, or Odo), an able and energetic prince, was Duke of Aquitaine.
                This prince, seeing his capital threatened by the Moslems, collected a numerous
                army of Gascons, Goths, and Franks, and marched
                bravely to the rescue. He attacked the Arabs under the walls of Toulouse, and
                succeeded in inflicting on them a most disastrous defeat (721). El Zama fell in
                the battle, and the discomfited Moslems were saved from total destruction only
                by the prudence and valor of Abdurrahman Ben Abdallah (Abderrahman,
                or Abderame), a veteran officer, whom they had
                elected by acclamation in the place of their late general.
                
               
              The Khalif, however, did not ratify the choice of the army, but named Anbesa to the government of Spain. The new governor
                advanced again into Aquitaine in 725; he took Carcassonne by storm, and
                penetrated as far as Burgundy; but the valiant Eudes succeeded ultimately in
                driving him back, and also in defeating several subsequent attempts of the
                Arabs to gain possession of Aquitaine.
                
               
              In the year 730, the Khalif Hesham, yielding
                to the wishes of the people and the army of Spain, restored Abdurrahman to the
                government of that part of the Arab dominions. That daring and ambitious
                commander proposed to subject to his sway, not only Aquitaine, but the entire
                Frank empire; and collected a formidable host to carry his resolve into
                execution. But, at the very threshold of his enterprise, he met with an
                obstacle which, though he indeed triumphantly overcame it, yet cannot be denied
                to have exercised a powerful adverse influence upon its final issue. This was
                the rebellion of Othman, or Munuza, a Moorish chief,
                who, as governor of Cerdagne, held the most important
                passes of the Pyrenees. The fortune of war had placed the beauteous daughter of
                Eudes in the hands of Munuza; and the political Duke
                of Aquitaine, justly appreciating the advantages of an alliance with the man
                who might be said to hold the keys of his house, had willingly consented to
                accept the African misbeliever for his son-in-law.
                
               
              The skill, rapidity, and decision, of Abdurrahman’s movements
                undoubtedly disconcerted the strategic combinations of the two allies, and Munuza was overcome and slain, ere Eudes could hasten to
                his assistance; the head of the rebel, and the daughter of the Duke of Aquitaine,
                were sent to Damascus. But much precious time was consumed, and a great number
                of combatants were lost, in this unexpected prelude to the invasion of France.
                However, immediately after the overthrow of Munuza, Abdurrahman
                advanced rapidly to the Rhone, crossed that river, and laid siege to Arles;
                Eudes attempted to relieve the beleaguered city, but his army was totally
                routed, and Arles fell into the hands of the invaders (731). Abdurrahman
                speedily conquered the greater part of Aquitaine, and advanced to Bordeaux. The
                intrepid Eudes met him once more, at the head of a numerous army; but neither
                the valor and skill of the Christian leader nor the bravery of his troops could
                save them from a most disastrous defeat. Bordeaux fell, and the Saracens overran
                the fairest provinces of France (732). Charles, who would most probably have
                remained deaf to the most urgent entreaties of Eudes, whom he regarded in the
                light of a rival, comprehended the necessity of a speedy and vigorous action,
                from the moment that he saw his own dominions threatened. He, therefore,
                rapidly collected his faithful Austrasians and the
                auxiliary contingents of the Alemanni, the Thuringians, and the Bavarians; and
                ordered the Neustrian and Burgundian nobles to join him with their followers;
                and although many of the Burgundian nobles hung back, yet a most powerful host
                of the nations of Germany and Gaul gathered under the banner of the Christian
                leader, who was joined also by Eudes and the remains of the Aquitanian army. In the center of France, between Tours and Poitiers, the Franks and the
                Moslems met, in the month of October, 732. Six days were spent in desultory
                warfare, and many a gallant heart had ceased to beat, ere as the red sun of the
                seventh day rose, the day on which it was to be decided whether mosque or
                cathedral should prevail in Europe. The battle raged fiercely from noon till
                eventide; the fiery sons of the South fought with tenfold their accustomed
                valor, and Abdurrahman emulated the glory of Kaled “the Sword of God”.
                
               
              The Germans stood firm as rocks, and fought as heroes; and the heavy
                battle-axe of Charles, wielded with irresistible strength, spread death and
                dismay in the Arabian ranks; the mighty strokes which the Christian hero dealt
                with that formidable weapon, gained him the epithet of Martel, the Hammer.
                Eudes, burning with the resentment of former defeats, strove to rival the
                prowess of his ally. Still, for many hours, the balance hung equipoised. The
                life-blood of thousands of Christians and thousands of Moslems, that had ere
                just raced so fiercely through its channels, mingled in sluggish streams on the
                ground. Evening set in, and still the contest raged with unabated fury; the
                Orientals had, indeed, repeatedly been forced to give way to the superior
                weight and strength of the Germans but their heroic chief had as often rallied
                them and led them on again to death and glory. At length, a German spear struck
                him to death: his fall decided the fate of the battle; the Saracens,
                disheartened by the loss of their great commander, retired to their camp. There
                was no leader left among them of sufficient renown and authority to replace the
                fallen hero; despairing of their ability to renew the fight next day with the
                slightest chance of success, they resolved upon a hasty retreat; and taking
                with them the richest and most portable portion of their spoil, they abandoned
                their camp in the middle of the night.
                
               
              Next morning, when Charles was marshaling forth his troops to renew the
                contest, his spies both surprised and rejoiced him with the welcome
                intelligence that the enemy were in full retreat to the south. The victory
                gained was decisive and final: the torrent of Arabian conquest was rolled back;
                and Europe was rescued from the threatened yoke of the Saracens. But the losses
                of the Christians also had been very great, and Charles wisely declined
                incurring with his sadly diminished forces, the possible mischances of a
                pursuit.
                
               
              Leaving to Eudes the task of reconquering his own land from the flying
                foe, Charles proceeded now to call the Burgundian nobles to account for their
                hesitation and lukewarmness in his cause. To secure
                their future allegiance, he placed officers of his into the Burgundian cities
                and castles; to little purpose, however, it would appear, as their presence did
                not prevent the discontented Burgundian nobles, a few years after, from calling
                in the Saracens, and actually delivering the city of Avignon into the hands of Jussuf Ben Abdurrahman, the Arabian governor of Narbonne
                (735).
                
               
              In 734, Charles defeated Poppo, the Duke of
                the Frisons, and regained the western part of
                Friesland. In 735, Duke Eudes died, and as his two sons, Hunold and Hatto, quarreled about the succession, Charles
                proffered his “armed mediation”, and settled the dispute finally by naming Hunold Duke of Aquitaine, after having exacted and obtained
                from that prince an oath of allegiance, not to the nominal king of the Franks,
                but to himself personally, and to his two sons of his first marriage, Carloman and Pepin. In 736, Charles had to repel another
                invasion of the Saxons, which prevented him from proceeding to Burgundy against
                the disaffected nobles and their allies, the Arabs; he sent, however, his
                brother Childebrand. In 737, he came himself; he
                speedily reduced Avignon, and expelled the Arabs from the Burgundian territory;
                the nobility and clergy, who had treasonably conspired against him with the
                enemy, or had acted in a hostile manner to him, he deprived of their
                possessions, bishoprics, &c., which he bestowed upon his friends and
                followers. In 738 he advanced into Septimania, and laid siege to Narbonne. He
                totally defeated Omar Ben Kaled, the Arabian general, who was marching to the
                relief of the beleaguered city; but the governor of Narbonne defended the place
                so valiantly and successfully, that the Franks were compelled to raise the
                siege. However, though Septimania remained in the hands of the Arabs till 755,
                when Pepin, the son of Charles Martel, recovered it, an effectual and final
                check had been put to their further advance into France.
                
               
              In 737, King Thierry died; but so firmly was the power of Charles Martel
                established now, that he could safely neglect to name a successor to the dead
                “monarch”; nay, in 741, he actually proceeded before a general assembly of the
                nobility and the army, to divide his dominions between his two sons of his
                first marriage (with Rotrudis), bestowing Austrasia,
                with Swabia and Thuringia, upon the elder, Carloman;
                Neustria, Burgundy, and Provence, upon the younger, Pepin. His son Grypho, whom Suanehilda had borne
                him, he excluded at first from all participation in his succession;
                subsequently he assigned him also a portion, which, after his death, led to the
                oppression and imprisonment of the youth by his elder brothers. In the same
                year (741) Charles was, on his return from a kind of pilgrimage to St. Denys,
                seized with a violent fever, of which he died at Carisiacum,
                or Quiercy, on the Oise, on the 22nd October.
                
               
                
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