
thumb|The stronghold of Fraxinetum was located inside the Massif des Maures (the colored region in the map).
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via Wikidata · CC0
thumb|The stronghold of Fraxinetum was located inside the Massif des Maures (the colored region in the map).
Fraxinetum or Fraxinet ( or , from Latin fraxinus: "ash tree", fraxinetum: "ash forest") was the site of a Muslim stronghold at the centre of a frontier state in Provence between about 887 and 972. It is identified with modern La Garde-Freinet, near Saint-Tropez. The fortress was established by Muslims from al-Andalus. From this base, the Muslims raided up the Rhône Valley, into Piedmont and as far as the Abbey of Saint Gall in Switzerland. Their main business was slave-raiding of Europeans for export to Islamic markets. For a time, they controlled the passes through the western Alps. They withstood several attempts to oust them, but were finally defeated by the combined forces of the Provençal and Piedmontese nobility at the battle of Tourtour in 972.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).