AQUITAINE, the name of an ancient province in France, the extent of
which has varied considerably from time to time. About the time of
Julius Caesar the name
Aquitania was given to that part of Gaul
lying between the Pyrenees and the Garonne, and its inhabitants were a
race, or races, distinct from the Celts. The name Aquitania is probably
a form of Auscetani, which in its turn is a lengthened form of Ausces,
and is thus cognate with the words Basque and Wasconia,
i.e.
Gascony. Although many of the tribes of Aquitania submitted to Julius
Caesar, it was not until about 28 B.C. that the district was brought
under the Roman yoke. In keeping with the Roman policy of
denationalization, the term Aquitania was extended, and under Augustus
it included the whole of Gaul south and west of the Loire and the
Allier, and thus ceased to possess ethnographical importance. In the 3rd
century A.D. this larger Aquitania was divided into three parts:
Aquitania Prima, the eastern part of the district between the
Loire and the Garonne;
Aquitania Secunda, the western part of the
same district; and
Aquitania Tertia, or
Novempopulana, the
region between the Garonne and the Pyrenees, or the original Aquitania.
The seats of government were respectively Bourges, Bordeaux and Eauze;
the province contained twenty-six cities, and was in the diocese of
Vienne.
1 Like the rest of Gaul, Aquitania absorbed a large measure of
Roman civilization, and this continued to distinguish the district down
to a late period. In the 5th century the Visigoths established
themselves in Aquitania Secunda, and also in parts of Aquitania Prima
and Novempopulana, but after the defeat of their king Alaric II. by the
Franks under Clovis in 507, they were supplanted by their conquerors.
Clovis and his successors extended their authority nominally to the
Pyrenees, but, as Guizot has remarked, "the conquest of Aquitania by
Clovis left it almost as alien to the people and king of Franks as it
had formerly been." Subsequently during the Merovingian period it was
contended for by the feeble rulers of the various Frankish kingdoms, and
was frequently partitioned among them; but the Aquitanians had little
difficulty in effectually resisting this authority, although they did
not establish themselves as a separate kingdom. About 628, indeed, they
gathered around Charibert, or Haribert, a brother of the Frankish king,
Dagobert I., in the hope of national independence; but after his death
in 630 they returned to their former condition. But this effort,
although a failure, brought about a certain measure of concord between
the two principal races inhabiting the district, and so prepared the way for the stubborn resistance which, subsequently, the
Aquitanians were able to offer to the Franks.
The first line of dukes began about 660 with one Felix, who, like his
successor, Lupus, probably owned allegiance to the Frankish kings, and
whose seat of government was Toulouse. About the end of the 7th century
an adventurer named Odo, or Eudes, made himself master of this region.
Attacked by the Saracens he inflicted on them a crushing defeat, but
when they reappeared, he was obliged to invoke the aid of Charles
Martel, who, as the price of his support, claimed and received the
homage of his ally. Odo was succeeded by his son Hunald, who after
carrying on a war against the Franks under Pippin the Short, retired to
a convent, leaving both the kingdom and the conflict to Waifer, or
Guaifer. For some years Waifer strenuously carried on an unequal
struggle with the Franks, but he was assassinated in 768, and with him
perished the national independence, although not the national
individuality, of the Aquitanians. In 781 Charlemagne bestowed Aquitaine
upon his young son, Louis, and as Louis was generally described as a
king, Aquitaine is referred to during the Carolingian period as a
kingdom, and not as a duchy. When Louis succeeded Charlemagne as emperor
in 814, he granted Aquitaine to his son Pippin, on whose death in 838
the Aquitanians chose his son Pippin II. (d. 865) as their king. The
emperor Louis I., however, opposed this arrangement and gave the kingdom
to his youngest son Charles, afterwards the emperor Charles the Bald.
Now followed a time of confusion and conflict which resulted eventually
in the success of Charles, although from 845 to 852 Pippin was in
possession of the kingdom.
Note
1According to H. Nissen,
Ital. Landeskunde (Berlin, 1902), ii.
665, a road ran from here to Minturnae; but no traces of it are to be
seen.
Continued on page two.
This article is from the 1911 edition of an encyclopedia,
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