he had lived, a heathen. His son, Poppa, succeeding
to the nominal sovereignty, did not actively oppose
the introduction of Christianity among his people,
but himself refused to be converted. Rebelling
against the Frank dominion, he was totally routed
by Charles Martell in a great battle (A.D.750) and
perished with a vast number of Frisians. The Christian
dispensation, thus enforced, was now accepted by these
northern pagans. The commencement of their conversion
had been mainly the work of their brethren from Britain.
The monk Wilfred was followed in a few years by the
Anglo-Saxon Willibrod. It was he who destroyed
the images of Woden in Walcheren, abolished his worship,
and founded churches in North Holland. Charles
Martell rewarded him with extensive domains about Utrecht,
together with many slaves and other chattels.
Soon afterwards he was consecrated Bishop of all the
Frisians. Thus rose the famous episcopate of Utrecht.
Another Anglo-Saxon, Winfred, or Bonifacius, had been
equally active among his Frisian cousins. His
crozier had gone hand in hand with the battle-axe.
Bonifacius followed close upon the track of his orthodox
coadjutor Charles. By the middle of the eighth
century, some hundred thousand Frisians had been slaughtered,
and as many more converted. The hammer which
smote the Saracens at Tours was at last successful
in beating the Netherlanders into Christianity.
The labors of Bonifacius through Upper and Lower Germany
were immense; but he, too, received great material
rewards. He was created Archbishop of Mayence,
and, upon the death of Willibrod, Bishop of Utrecht.
Faithful to his mission, however, he met, heroically,
a martyr’s death at the hands of the refractory
pagans at Dokkum. Thus was Christianity established
in the Netherlands.
Under Charlemagne, the Frisians often rebelled, making
common cause with the Saxons. In 785, A.D., they
were, however, completely subjugated, and never rose
again until the epoch of their entire separation from
the Frank empire. Charlemagne left them their
name of free Frisians, and the property in their own
land. The feudal system never took root in their
soil. “The Frisians,” says their statute
book; “shall be free, as long as the wind blows
out of the clouds and the world stands.”
They agreed, however, to obey the chiefs whom the
Frank monarch should appoint to govern them, according
to their own laws. Those laws were collected,
and are still extant. The vernacular version
of their Asega book contains their ancient customs,
together with the Frank additions. The general
statutes of Charlemagne were, of course, in vigor also;
but that great legislator knew too well the importance
attached by all mankind to local customs, to allow
his imperial capitulara to interfere, unnecessarily,
with the Frisian laws.
VI.