A Short History of the Middle Ages Fourth Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Thereafter the pressure of invasion eased as Alfred reorganized his army, set up


strongholds of his own (called burhs), and created a fleet of ships—a real navy. An


uneasy stability was achieved, with the Vikings dominating the east of England and


Alfred and his successors gaining control over most of the rest.


On the Continent, too, the invaders came to stay, above all in Normandy. The


new inhabitants of the region were integrated into the political system when, in 911,


their leader Rollo converted to Christianity and received Normandy as a duchy from


the Frankish king Charles the Simple (or Straightforward). Although many of the


Normans adopted sedentary ways, some of their descendants in the early eleventh


century ventured to the Mediterranean, where they established themselves as rulers


of petty principalities in southern Italy. In 1061 the Normans began the conquest of


Sicily.


Muslims


Sicily, once Byzantine, was the rich and fertile plum of the conquests achieved by the


Muslim invaders of the ninth and tenth centuries. That they took the island attests to


the power of a new Muslim navy developed by the dynasty that preceded the


Fatimids in Ifriqiya. After 909, Sicily came under Fatimid rule, but by mid-century it


was controlled by independent Islamic princes, and Muslim immigrants were swelling


the population.


Elsewhere the Muslim presence in Western Europe was more ephemeral. In the


first half of the tenth century, Muslim raiders pillaged southern France, northern Italy,


and the Alpine passes. But these were quick expeditions, largely attacks on churches


and monasteries. Some of these Muslims did establish themselves at La Garde-


Freinet, in Provence, becoming landowners in the region and lords of Christian serfs.


They even hired themselves out as occasional fighters for the wars that local


Christian aristocrats were waging against one another. But they made the mistake of


capturing for ransom the holiest man of his era, Abbot Majolus of Cluny (c.906–


994). Outraged, the local aristocracy finally came together and ousted the Muslims


from their midst.


Magyars (Hungarians)


By contrast, the Magyars stayed on. “Magyar” was and remains their name for


themselves, though the rest of Europe called them “Hungarians,” from the Slavonic


for “Onogurs,” a people already settled in the Danube basin in the eighth and ninth

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