- Siege of Asselt
The Siege of Asselt was a Frankish siege of the
Viking camp at Asselt inFrisia in the year 882. Though the Vikings were not forced by arms to abandon their camp, they were compelled to come to terms whereby their leader, Godfrid, was converted to Christianity.The precise location of Asselt is somewhat disputed. The charters call it "Ascloha" and it was on the
Meuse . It has most often been identified withElsloo north ofMaastricht , though some scholars preferAsselt nearSwalmen upstream fromVenloo . Elsloo is more than the fourteen miles from the Rhine which the Bavarian continuation of the "Annales Fuldenses " assigns the locale.Immediately after assuming the kingship of
East Francia inRegensburg in early May,Charles the Fat , already emperor, held an assembly (late that same month) at Worms to determine a course of action against the Vikings who were encamped at Asselt. An army comprisingFranks ,Alemanni ,Bavarii ,Thuringii ,Saxons , andLombards was assembled to march north and drive off the Vikings. The Lombards, Alemans, and Franks approached up theRhine on the west while the Bavarians went along the eastern bank and crossed over atAndernach . The emperor, taking the line of verse "What do I care whether I win by force or tricks?" as his strategy, sent a force of Bavarians underArnulf of Carinthia and Franks underHenry of Franconia ahead to ambush the unsuspecting Northmen.According to the biased account of the Mainz continuation of the "Annales Fuldenses", the camp was about to fall when
Liutward of Vercelli , bribed by the Vikings, convinced the emperor to meet envoys from Godfrid and make peace, even exchanging hostages. Godfrid was granted theKennemerland , which had formerly been ruled byRoric , as a vassal. Charles also agreed to pay aDanegeld to the Viking leaderSigifrid , partly using monies from churches. The Mainz continuator portrayed the army as greatly displeased with their emperor. The Bavarian continuator merely mentions that the initial ambush was thwarted by traitors and the subsequent siege — which lasted twelve days — by the spread of disease from rotting corpses and a very severe hailstorm. Godfrid, according to this account, swore oaths to Charles promising never to again lay waste his kingdom and accepted Christianity and baptism, at which Charles stood as his godfather. The Mainz continuation had a particularly poor opinion of Charles the Fat because its patron, Liutbert, had been dismissed from his court position with Charles' succession.The campaign over, Charles returned to
Koblenz and there dispersed the army. His reputation as a weak and inept ruler stems largely from this campaign, though contemporaries did not in general see it as a failure. [Reuter, 118.] Only the Mainz cleric of Liutbert's, adding to the annals of Fulda had that impression. [MacLean, 30–37.]ources
*MacLean, Simon. "Kingship and Politics in the Late Ninth Century: Charles the Fat and the end of the Carolingian Empire". Cambridge University Press: 2003.
*Reuter, Timothy . "Germany in the Early Middle Ages, c. 800-1056". Longman, 1991.
*" [http://www.medievalsources.co.uk/fulda.htm The Annals of Fulda] ". (Manchester Medieval series, Ninth-Century Histories, Volume II.) Reuter, Timothy (trans.) Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1992.Notes
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.