'Hunald' (also known as ''Chunold'', ''Hunold'', or ''Hunaud''),
Duke of Aquitaine (
735-
744 or
748), succeeded his father
Odo the Great in 735.
He refused to recognize the high authority of the
Frankish mayor of the palace,
Charles Martel, whereupon Charles marched south of the
Loire, seized
Bordeaux, and
Blaye, but eventually allowed Hunald to retain
Aquitaine on condition that he should promise fidelity.
From
736 to
741, the relations between Charles and Hunald seem to have remained amicable. But upon Charles's death in 741, Hunald declared war against the
Franks, crossed the Loire and burned
Chartres. Menaced by
Pepin and
Carloman, Hunald begged for peace in
745 and retired to a monastery, probably on the
Île de Ré.
We find him later in
Italy, where he allied himself with the
Lombards and was stoned to death. He had left the duchy of Aquitaine to
Waifer, who was probably his son, and who struggled for eight years in defending his independence.
At the death of Pepin and at the beginning of the reign of Charlemagne, there was a last rising of the Aquitanians. This revolt was directed by a certain Hunald and was repressed in
769 by
Charlemagne and his brother Carloman. Hunald sought refuge with the duke of the
Gascons,
Lupus, who handed him over to his enemies. In spite of the opinion of certain historians, this Hunald seems to have been a different person from the old duke of Aquitaine.
[1]
Notes
1. Higounet, p 27, regards him as "Hunald II" and considers him the most likely leader of the Basque army which won the Battle of Roncesvalles.
Sources
★
Oman, Charles. ''The Dark Ages 476-918''. Rivingtons: London, 1914.
★ Higounet, Charles. ''Bordeaux pendant le haut moyen age''. Bordeaux, 1963.
★ J.Vaissette, ''Histoire génerale de Languedoc'', vol. i. (ed. of 1872 seq.); Th. Breysig, H Hahn, L Oelsner, S Abel and B Simson, ''Jahrbücher des deutschen Reichs''.
★