Textbook Tours
Barely related reading: Chris Bray notes some oddities and ironies in the new Iraqi Constitution and The Little Professor is grading student writing.
Meanwhile, I'm reviewing the textbook (Brummet, et al., Civilization, Pearson/Longman, 11e) for my section on Islamic societies tomorrow, and I ran across a passage that made me stop and ... well, think (and blog):
The Muslims in Spain seem never to have had serious intentions of expanding their territorial holdings across the Pyrenees into what is now France, but they did engage in seasonal raids to the north. One such raiding party was defeated by Charles Martel near Tours in 732 in a battle that Europeans portrayed later as a decisive blow to Muslim expansion in Europe. But the Byzantines indeed delivered such a blow: in 717 the Byzantine emperor Leo III won a major victory over the Muslims that halted the Umayyad advance into eastern Europe. (p. 208)
A few things jumped out at me, most of them logical non sequiturs in the passage:
Tours is indeed a considerable distance from the territory of al-Andalus, which suggests either an abortive expansion or a short-term incursion. I'd certainly thought the former was the standard understanding. Doing World History is an exercise in constant revisionism, because there's no way we can easily keep up with changing interpretations in every field. Though sometimes the textbooks represent a minority view as standard....
Even if the Muslim raids were"seasonal" it doesn't necessarily mean that expansion was not desired. It might just mean that it was hard. The fact that a"seasonal raid" made it all the way to Tours and seriously challenged the might of Martel suggests something more than a little looting was at stake. Is it possible that the"seasonal raids" view has an element of"sour grapes"?
The implied connection between Western and Eastern European theaters isn't intuitively logical: expansion stymied on one front often finds an outlet on another (and indeed, the next paragraph is about the eastward expansion into central Asia). I do like the way World History textbooks have resurrected the history of Byzantium and made it a central actor on the world stage, as it should be in this semester;"Western Civ" never handled the Eastern empire all that well.
I know that World textbook writing is, by definition, the art of leaving out everything you possibly can, but there's clearly an argument going on here and it could use a bit of elucidation. So, I'd like to throw this open to folks who know this region/era better than I: any medievalists (European or Islamic) or historiographers want to help clarify the situation for me?