- Battle of Vouillé
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Battle of Vouillé
partof=The battles of Clovis I
date=507 AD
place=near contemporaryPoitiers
casus=
territory=
result=Decisive Frankish victory, territorial gain ofGallia Aquitania
combatant1=Franks
combatant2=Visigoths
commander1=Clovis I
commander2=Alaric II
strength1=unknown
strength2=unknown
casualties1=unknown
casualties2=unknown, Alaric II was killedThe Battle of Vouillé or Campus Vogladensis was fought in the northern
marches of Visigothic territory, at a small place nearPoitiers (Gaul ), in the spring of507 between theFranks commanded by Clovis and theVisigoths ofAlaric II , the conqueror of Spain.Clovis and Anastasius I of theByzantine Empire agreed that each would attack theGoths on their own side.The Franks crossed the
Loire river . Clovis himself killed Alaric. It may have been that huge defections in the field, from optimates and gothic nobles was the cause of defeat, as an increased royal power in the clan of the Balths was eroding the other clans independence.Fact|date=December 2007 Rank families from the Goths have been sifting away to "distant" and derelict Spanish regions across the Pyrenees, according toJordanes ,where land tenure was for grabs in depopulated high plains of Castile and the draft in military duties was easier to dodge.The battle forced the Goths to retreat toSeptimania , which they continued to hold. The success at Vouillé allowed the Franks to control the southwestern part ofFrance , and capture Toulouse. Alaric's illegitimate sonGesalec tried to organize a counterstrike atNarbonne , but he was deposed and ultimately killed when Narbonne was taken by Burgundian allies of the Franks, who held it until 511. The Franks might have pushed farther, hadTheodoric the Great not intervened.Frankish
Aquitaine , formerly linked to Hispano-Roman trade routes and territories, drifted into a role as an isolated outpost, to judge from the lack of trade items in its 7th and 8th century archaeology. Its Frankish kings resided atToulouse .Clovis, the Frankish king, is an excellent example of the change of warfare that occurred at that time: wars were no longer about the conquest of territory with the view to its long term expansion; they provided immediate profit in the form of plunder. His very name meant 'glory by combat' and his successes in battle and his conversion to Christianity brought him Roman recognition. After his success in this battle the
Byzantine emperor, Anastasius, made him a consul.
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