of assigning to warriors a portion of the ecclesiastical
revenues. But they, being more religious, perhaps,
than Charles Martel, or more impressed with the importance
of humoring the priestly power, were more vexed and
more anxious about the necessity under which they
found themselves of continuing to despoil the churches
and of persisting in a system which was putting the
finishing stroke to the ruin of all ecclesiastical
discipline. They were more eager to mitigate
the evil and to offer the Church compensation for
their share in this evil to which it was not in their
power to put a stop. Accordingly at the March
parade held at Leptines in 743, it was decided, in
reference to ecclesiastical lands applied to the military
service: 1st, that the churches having the ownership
of those lands should share the revenue with the lay
holder; 2d, that on the death of a warrior in enjoyment
of an ecclesiastical benefice, the benefice should
revert to the Church; 3d, that every benefice by deprivation
whereof any church would be reduced to poverty should
be at once restored to her. That this capitular
was carried out, or even capable of being carried
out, is very doubtful; but the less Carloman and Pepin
succeeded in repairing the material losses incurred
by the Church since the accession of the Carlovingians,
the more zealous they were in promoting the growth
of her moral power and the restoration of her discipline.
. . . That was the time at which there began
to be seen the spectacle of the national assemblies
of the Franks, the gatherings of the March parades
transformed into ecclesiastical synods under the presidency
of the titular legate of the Roman Pontiff, and dictating,
by the mouth of the political authority, regulations
and laws with the direct and formal aim of restoring
divine worship and ecclesiastical discipline, and
of assuring the spiritual welfare of the people.”
(Fauriel,
Histoire de la Gaule, &c., t.
III., p. 224.)
Pepin, after he had been proclaimed king and had settled
matters with the Church as well as the warlike questions
remaining for him to solve permitted, directed all
his efforts towards the two countries which, after
his father’s example, he longed to reunite to
the Gallo-Frankish monarchy, that is, Septimania,
still occupied by the Arabs, and Aquitaine, the independence
of which was stoutly and ably defended by Duke Eudes’
grandson, Duke Waifre. The conquest of Septimania
was rather tedious than difficult. The Franks,
after having victoriously scoured the open country
of the district, kept invested during three years its
capital, Narbonne, where the Arabs of Spain, much weakened
by their dissensions, vainly tried to throw in re-enforcements.
Besides the Mussulman Arabs the population of the
town numbered many Christian Goths, who were tired
of suffering for the defence of their oppressors, and
who entered into secret negotiations with the chiefs
of Pepin’s army, the end of which was, that