a kincsrablásról:
2 független forrás
Vast quantities of Avar loot were brought back to Aachen: Einhard wrote in The Life of Charles, ‘the Franks seemed to have been poor until then, so rich did they now become’.29 Though Einhard characteristically highlighted the Franks, they were not the only beneficiaries.
A contemporary Anglo-Saxon author writing annals at York, presumably informed by Alcuin from Aachen, wrote that transporting all the gold and silver and precious robes of silk from Avaria [central Hungary] to Aachen took 15 wagons, each pulled by 4 oxen.30
The Royal Frankish Annals reported: ‘God’s steward [Charles] sent a large part of the treasure to Rome to the thresholds of the apostles, but the rest he distributed to his great men, clerical and lay, and to his other faithful men.’31
https://www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/sites/default/files/06%20Nelson%201803.pdf
a deportálási gyakorlatról:
Saxons were deported en masse with their families into Frankish territory
139.old