| Battle of Albelda (851) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of theReconquista | |||||||
| |||||||
| Belligerents | |||||||
| Banu Qasi Emirate of Córdoba | Franks Gascons | ||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
| Musa ibn Musa | |||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| Unknown | Unknown | ||||||
The firstBattle of Albelda took place nearAlbelda in 851 between theMuslim forces ofMusa ibn Musa, chief of theBanu Qasi and governor ofTudela on behalf of theEmirate of Córdoba, and an army of theFranks andGascons fromFrance, probably allies of theChristianKingdom of Asturias, inveterate enemy of Musa. The Muslims, who were probably the aggressors, were victorious.
The battle is usually connected with a campaign ofOrdoño I of Asturias to suppress aBasque revolt, and may be related also to the capture of certain Frankish and Gascon leaders. In the past, the battle has been conflated with theBattle of Monte Laturce, also near Albelda, which occurred in 859 or 860.
According toIbn Hayyan, in 237A.H. (851/2 A.D.), the same year thatÍñigo Arista died, Musa ibn Musa defeated theGascons (Glaskiyyun) in battle under the walls of Albelda. On the first day of battle, Musa suffered serious losses, and he himself received thirty-five blows of a lance. On the second day Musa counterattacked and forced the Gascons to retreat. According toIbn al-Athir, the Muslims invaded Christian territory in 851 and had a great victory atAlbaida, the fame of which spread throughoutal-Andalus. TheChronicle of Alfonso III records that Musa directed his forces against the "Franks and Gauls", killing many and razing many places. The Gascon presence at Albelda in 851 may be explained as an attempted reprisal for an attack by Musa north of the Pyrenees, since at that time Musa was allied with theKingdom of Pamplona, Gascony's southern neighbour.
In 851, the year after he succeeded to the throne, Ordoño I of Asturias suppressed a revolt of his Basque subjects. This done he marched to the other side of theriver Ebro and, "with the help of God" according to theChronicle of Alfonso III, forced the "Chaldaeans" (an artful expression for the Muslims[citation needed] ) to flee. After this, theChronicle adds, the Basques submitted. This encounter with the Muslims may be the same one as recorded by both Ibn Hayyan and Ibn al-Athir under the same year. It may have taken place near Albelda, Musa may have been commanding the Muslims, and it is possible that Ordoño's Gascon allies, called on to help quash the Basque insurrection, were put to flight by the Muslims, who were in turn put to flight by Ordoño.
It is possible that close ties existed between Asturias and Gascony at this time. Ordoño's kinsman,Alfonso II, had been allied withVelasco the Gascon, and the Gascons in times of rebellion may have sought out Asturian aid, even Asturian suzerainty, as anAragonese charter of 867 may indicate.[1]
TheChronicle records that, after the battle of Albelda in 851, and partly by means of war, partly by treachery, Musa captured two Frankish leaders,Sancho andEmenon,[2] whom he threw into a dungeon. The date of Sancho and Emenon's capture is not given, but Sancho disappears suddenly from Gascony in 855, when his nephew,Arnold, a son of Emenon, appears as duke. Musa is known to have made an expedition against theMarca Hispanica in 855–6, as recorded in Ibn al-Athir,Ibn Idari, andIbn Khaldun. It is possible, on the other hand, that Sancho and Emenon were captured at the encounter of 851, where Gascons are known to have been present, or in 852, during a Frankish campaign to rescueBarcelona (recently captured) recorded in theAnnales regni Francorum. The "gifts" from theFrankish kingCharles the Bald, which Ordoño's soldiers found in the camp of Musa at Monte Laturce, may have been theransom paid for Sancho and Emenon, in which case their capture occurred prior to 859.