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Brunehilde der Wisigothen ♔ Ref: AG-608 |•••► #España #Genealogía #Genealogy

Padre: Atanagildo I, Rey De Los Visigodos
Madre:


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30 ° Bisabuela/ Great Grandmother de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
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Brunichild is your 30th great grandmother.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father → Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar
his mother → María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas
her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar
her mother → Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García
her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva
his father → Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero
his father → Manuel Llamosas y Requecens
his father → Isabel de Requesens
his mother → Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda
her father → Juan de Zúñiga Avellaneda y Velasco
his father → Pedro de Zúñiga y Avellaneda, II conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father → Diego López de Zúñiga y Guzmán, I conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father → Isabel Elvira de Guzmán y Ayala, III Señora de Gibraleón
his mother → Elvira López de Ayala Guzmán
her mother → Leonor Suárez de Toledo y Guzmán
her mother → D. Pero Suárez de Toledo, señor de Bolaños
her father → Teresa Vázquez de Acuña, Señora de Villaverde
his mother → Vasco Martins da Cunha, "o Seco", 5º senhor de Tábua
her father → Joana Rodrigues de Nomães
his mother → Rodrigo Martins de Nomães, Señor de Reviñade y Silva-Escura
her father → Rodrigo Romães Conde de Monterroso
his father → Remón II de Monterroso, III conde de Monterroso
his father → Rodrigo Romaes, II conde de Monterroso y de Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father → Remón Romaes, Conde de Monterroso y Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father → Fruela I el Cruel, rey de Asturias
his father → Ermessenda, reina consorte de Asturias
his mother → Pelayo, rey de Asturias
her father → Liubigotona
his mother → Suintila, rey de los visigodos
her father → Clodesinde
his mother → Brunichild
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Brunehilde der Wisigothen MP
Gender: Female
Birth: 534
Castilla-La Mancha, Toledo, Spain
Death: 613 (78-80)
Renève-sur-Vingeanne, France
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Atanagildo I, rey de los visigodos and Gosvinta
Wife of Siegbert I, King of Austrasia and Mérovech de Soissons
Mother of Ingunda de Metz; Childébert II, King of Austrasia & Burgundy; Clodesinde and N.N. d'Austrasie
Sister of Stephan; Ofilón, II; Gosvinta; Ofilon Prince of the Visigoths; Esteban Prince of the Visigoths and 1 other
Added by: Bertha Broadfoot of Laon, Queen of the Franks on June 12, 2007
Managed by: Margaret (C) and 127 others
Curated by: Victar
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English (default) edit | history
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/VANDALS,%20SUEVI,%20VISIGOTHS.htm#BrunechildisVisigothdied613

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Brunhild Queen of Austrasia (1)

Born: 550 (1)

Marriage: Sigebert I of Metz on an unknown date (1)

Died: 613 at age 63 (1)

General Notes:

Brunhild, queen of the Frankish kingdom known as Austrasia (in present-day northeastern France and southwestern Germany), the daughter of Athanagild (reigned 554-67), king of the Visigoths in Spain. Brunhild was married to Sigebert I, the Merovingian king of Austrasia. Her sister Galswintha married Sigebert's brother Chilperic, ruler of the neighboring Frankish kingdom of Neustria. Fredegund, Chilperic's former concubine, caused Galswintha to be murdered; she then married Chilperic. Brunhild determined to avenge herself on Fredegund, and the annals of the next half century in Gaul are filled with the bloody deeds provoked by the enmity of the two women.

Brunhild and her husband were successful until Sigebert was murdered in 575 at the instigation of Fredegund. Brunhild herself was captured by Chilperic, but she escaped, returned to Austrasia, and governed as regent in the name of her son, Childebert II. After the death of her son, she ruled Austrasia in the name of her young grandson. Finally, the armies of Austrasia were overthrown in 613 by Clotaire II of Neustria, son of Fredegund; the aged queen herself was taken captive. For three days she was subjected to insult and torture, then bound to a wild horse and dragged to death.

Family Links

Spouses/Children:

Sigebert I of Metz

-1. Childebert II King of Austrasia and Burgundy+

Forrás / Source:

http://www.delmars.com/family/perrault/7371.htm

Brunhilda of Austrasia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Brunhilda" redirects here. For the figure of Germanic legend, see Brynhildr.

Brunhilda[1] (c. 543 – 613) was a Frankish queen who ruled the eastern kingdoms of Austrasia and Burgundy in the names of her sons and grandsons. Initially known as a liberal ruler of great political acumen, she became notorious for her cruelty and avarice.

Contents [hide]

1 Life

1.1 First marriage

1.2 Second marriage

1.3 First regency

1.4 Relations with King Guntram

1.5 Second regency

1.6 Third regency

2 Religion

3 In legend

4 See also

5 Notes

6 Further reading

7 Sources

[edit]Life

She was possibly born about 543 in Toledo, the Visigothic capital, the daughter of the Visigoth king Athanagild and Goiswintha, his queen. She was the younger of his two daughters. She was only eleven years old when her father was elevated to the kingship (554). She was educated in Toledo as an Arian Christian.

[edit]First marriage

In 567, she was married to king Sigebert I of Austrasia (a grandson of Clovis I) who had sent an embassy to Toledo loaded with gifts. She joined him at Metz. Upon her marriage, she abjured Arianism and converted to orthodox Roman Catholicism.[2]

Sigebert's father, Clotaire I, had reunited the four kingdoms of the Franks, but when he died, Sigebert and his three brothers divided them again. According to historian and bishop Gregory of Tours, Sigebert's marriage to a Visigothic princess was a criticism of his brothers' choices in wives. Instead of marrying low-born and promiscuous women, Sigebert contracted a princess of education and morals.

In response to Sigebert's noble marriage, his brother King Chilperic of Soissons sent to Spain for Brunhilda's sister, Galswintha. Gregory of Tours suggests that he proposed because he envied his brother's marriage to Brunhilda.[3] However, Galswintha ordered him to purge his court of prostitutes and mistresses and he soon grew tired of her. He and his favourite mistress, one Fredegund, conspired to murder her within the year. He then married Fredegund.

Brunhilda so detested Fredegund for the death of her sister—and this hatred was so fiercely reciprocated—that the two queens persuaded their husbands to go to war.[4] Sigebert persuaded their other brother, the elder Guntram of Burgundy, to mediate the dispute between the queens. He decided that Galswintha's dower of Bordeaux, Limoges, Cahors, Béarn, and Bigorre should be turned over to Brunhilda in restitution. However, Chilperic did not easily give up the cities and Brunhilda did not forget the murder. Germanus, Bishop of Paris, negotiated a brief peace between them. Between 567 and 570, Brunhilda bore Sigebert three children: Ingund, Chlodosind, and Childebert.

The peace was then broken by Chilperic, who invaded Sigebert's dominions. Sigebert defeated Chilperic, who fled to Tournai. The people of Paris hailed Sigebert as a conqueror when he went there with Brunhilda and their children. Germanus wrote to Brunhilda, asking her to persuade her husband to restore the peace and to spare his brother. Chroniclers of Germanus' life say that she ignored this; certainly Sigebert set out to besiege Tournai. Fredegund responded to this threat to her husband by hiring two assassins, who killed Sigebert at Vitry with poisoned daggers (scramasaxi, according to Gregory). Brunhilda was captured and imprisoned at Rouen.

[edit]Second marriage

When, after disobeying his father's direct orders, Merovech, the son of Chilperic and his first wife Audovera, went to Rouen on pretext of visiting his mother Audovera, he decided to marry the widowed Brunhilda. Thus he strengthened his chances of becoming a king. His stepmother, Fredegund, was determined that only her sons should succeed as kings, and she eliminated her husband's sons by other women. They were married by the bishop Praetextatus, though the marriage was contrary to canon law, as Gregory is quick to note,[5] Brunhilda being Merovech's aunt. Quickly, Chilperic besieged them in the church of St Martin on the walls. Eventually he made peace with them, but he took Merovech away with him to Soissons.

In an effort to nullify the marriage, Chilperic had Merovech tonsured and sent to the monastery of Le Mans to become a priest. Merovech fled to the sanctuary of St Martin at Tours, the church of Gregory (who is thus an eyewitness to these events),[6] and later Champagne. He finally returned to Tours in 578, and when his bid for power failed, he asked his servant to kill him.[7]

[edit]First regency

Brunhilda now tried to seize the regency of Austrasia in the name of her son Childebert II, but she was resisted fiercely by her nobles and had to retire briefly to the court of Guntram of Burgundy before obtaining her goal. At that time, she ruled Austrasia as queen. Not being a fighter, she was primarily an administrative reformer, with a Visigothic education. She repaired the old Roman roads, built many churches and abbeys, constructed the necessary fortresses, reorganised the royal finances, and restructured the royal army. However, she antagonised the nobles by her continued imposition of royal authority wherever it was lax. To reinforce her positions and the crown's prestige and power, she convinced Guntram, newly heirless, to adopt Childebert as his own son and heir. This he did in 577.[8] In 579, she married her daughter Ingunda, then only thirteen, to the Visigothic prince Hermenegild, allying her house to that of the king of her native land. However, Hermenegild converted to Catholicism and he and his wife both died in the ensuing religious wars which tore apart the Visigothic kingdom in Spain.

Brunhilda ruled Austrasia until Childebert came of age in 583, at the traditional Merovingian majority of thirteen.

[edit]Relations with King Guntram

The conflict with Fredegund flared up once more upon the death of Chilperic. Now in the regency in Neustria, Fredegund was in a position to renew the war with her old enemy. Simultaneously, Brunhilda had to deal with her own internal enemies.

Many of the dukes strongly opposed her influence over her son Childebert, the king. Three of them—Rauching, Ursio, and Berthefrid—conspired to assassinate Childebert; however, their plot was found out. Rauching was killed and Ursio and Berthefrid fled to a fortress. Upon this, Guntram immediately begged for Childebert, Brunhilda, and Childebert's new sons to take refuge at his court. This they did and soon Ursio and Berthefrid were killed. In 587, Guntram, Childebert, and Brunhild settled the Pact of Andelot[9] securing for Childebert the Burgundian succession and a continuing alliance of the two realms of Austrasia and Burgundy for the rest of Guntram's life.

In that same year, King Reccared I of the Visigoths sent embassies to both Childebert and Guntram, the former accepting them and consolidating an alliance and the latter refusing to see them for some reason or another. Thus, when Brunhilda and Childebert negotiated a marriage for the king's sister Chlodosind with the king of Spain, it was rejected by Guntram and abandoned. In 592, Guntram died and Childebert, as per the treaty, succeeded to his kingdom, immediately making war on Clotaire II of Neustria.

[edit]Second regency

Upon Childebert's death in September or October 595, Brunhilda attempted to govern Austrasia and Burgundy in the name of her grandsons Theudebert II and Theuderic II, respectively. Though she attributed the death of Childebert to Fredegund, the latter died in 597 and the direct conflict between her and Brunhilda ended. Peace would elude the Franks, however, for many years more as the conflict raged between the two queens' descendants.

In 599, Brunhilda's eldest grandson, Theudebert, at whose court she was staying, exiled her. She was found wandering near Arcis in Champagne by a peasant, who brought her to Theuderic. The peasant was rewarded with the bishopric of Auxerre, as the legend goes. Theuderic welcomed her and readily fell under her influence, which was now inclined to vengeance against Theudebert. Soon the brothers were at war.

It is at this point that Brunhilda, now in her later 50's and having survived all the previous tribulations, begins to display that ruthlessness which led to her especially violent demise. Brunhilda first took herself Protadius as lover and, desiring to promote him to high office, conspired to have Berthoald, the mayor of the palace, killed. In 604, she convinced Theuderic to send Berthoald to inspect the royal villae along the Seine. Clotaire, probably alerted by men of Brunhilda's bidding, sent his own mayor Landric (ironically, a former paramour of Fredegund) to meet Berthoald, who had only a small contingent of men with him. Realising that he had been the victim of courtly plotting, Berthoald, in the ensuing confrontation, overchased the enemy until he was surrounded and killed. Protadius was promptly put in his place.

Brunhilda and Protadius soon persuaded Theuderic to return to war with Theudebert, but the mayor was murdered by his warriors, who did not wish to fight to assuage the ego of queen. The man who ordered Protadius' execution, Duke Uncelen, was soon arrested by Brunhilda and tortured and executed. He was not the first ducal victim of the queen's revenges.

It was also during these later regencies that Desiderius, Bishop of Vienne (later Saint Didier) publicly accused her of incest and cruelty. Desiderius finally enraged her with a pointed sermon on chastity preached in 612 before her and Theuderic, with whom she then hired three assassins to murder the bishop at the village now-called Saint-Didier-sur-Chalaronne.

In that year, at the battle of Tolbiac, Theuderic defeated and captured Theudebert, whom the queen[who?] was now claiming was in fact the son of a gardener, and brought him and his royal paraphernalia to Brunhilda, who subsequently had him put up in a monastery. She probably also then had him murdered (along with his son Merovech) to allow Theuderic to succeed to both thrones unhindered. This he did, shortly thereafter then dying of dysentery in his Austrasian capital of Metz, in late 613.

Third regency

The successor of Theuderic II was his bastard son Sigebert, a child. The mayor of the palace of Austrasia, Warnachar, fearing that at his young age he would fall under the influence of his great-grandmother, brought him before a national assembly, where he was proclaimed king by the nobles, who then did homage to him ruling over both his father's kingdoms. Nonetheless, he could not be kept out of the influence of Brunhilda. Thus, for the last time in a long life (now in her 70's), she was regent of the Franks, this time for her own great-grandson.

But Warnachar and Rado, mayor of the palace of Burgundy, along with Pepin of Landen and Arnulf of Metz, resentful of her regency, abandoned the cause of Brunhilda over the young king and joined with her old antagonist Clotaire II, promising not to rise in defence of the queen-regent and recognising Clotaire as rightful regent and guardian of Sigebert. Brunhilda, with Sigebert, met Clotaire's army on the Aisne, but the dukes yet again betrayed her: the Patrician Aletheus, Duke Rocco, and Duke Sigvald deserted her and she and her king had to flee. They fled as far as the Orbe, hoping to enlist the aid of certain German tribes, but Clotaire's minions caught up with them by Lake Neuchâtel. The young king and his brother Corbo were both killed: Thus ended the long and bloody feud between Austrasia and Neustria, and, reuniting the two kingdoms, Clotaire held the entire realm of the Franks.

Clotaire then accused Brunhilda of the death of ten kings of the Franks The identity of the ten kings comes from the Fourth Book of the Chronicle of Fredegar. It is usually said to include Sigebert I, Chilperic I, Theudebert II, Theuderic II, Sigebert II, Merovech (Chilperic's son), Merovech (Theuderic's son), Corbo (Theuderic's son), and Childebert (Theuderic's son) and the sons of Theudebert. along with many churchmen, including Desiderius. According to the Liber Historiae Francorum:

"Then the army of the Franks and Burgundians joined into one, all shouted together that death would be most fitting for the very wicked Brunhilda. Then King Clotaire ordered that she be lifted on to a camel and led through the entire army. Then she was tied to the feet of wild horses and torn apart limb from limb. Finally she died. Her final grave was the fire. Her bones were burnt."

One legend has her being dragged by a wild mare down the Roman road La Chaussée Brunehaut at Abbeville.

[edit]Religion

Brunhilda was raised as an Arian Christian, but upon her marriage to Sigebert, converted to Roman Catholicism. In general, she protected the church and treated Pope Gregory the Great with great respect. He wrote a series of positive letters to her; in 597 he wrote to her about interdicting pagan rites such as tree worship. Gregory of Tours was another favoured cleric; he was a trusted courtier to her and her son from 587 until his death. She also took a keen personal interest in the bishoprics and monasteries within her dominion. This brought her into conflict with Columbanus, abbot of Luxeuil, whom she eventually exiled to Italy, where he founded Bobbio. Brunhilda also played a role in perpetuating the diocese of Maurienne as a suffragan bishopric of the archdiocese of Vienne. In 576, Brunhilda's protector, Sigebert's brother Guntram, had founded the new bishopric at Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne, separating the Maurienne Valley and the neighboring Susa Valley from the Diocese of Turin. The Bishop of Turin protested this to Brunhilda for more than twenty years, but even when Pope Gregory the Great supported his complaint in 599, Brunhilda dismissed it.

Brunhilda was buried in the Abbaye de St. Martin at Autun that she founded in 602 on the spot where the bishop of Tours had cut down a beech-tree that served as an object of pagan worship. The abbey was destroyed in 1793 and Brunhilda's sarcophagus is now in the Musée Lapidaire in Avignon.

Brunhilda commissioned the building of several churches and the abbey of St. Vincent at Laon (founded in 580). She is also credited with founding the castle of Bruniquel and having a Roman road resurfaced near Alligny-en-Morvan (where the name of a nearby hill Terreau Bruneau is believed to be derived from hers). The part of Mauves-sur-Loire known as la Fontaine Bruneau is named after Brunhilda who may have cooled herself with the fountain's water when she suffered heat exhaustion.

[edit]In legend

Many scholars have seen Brunhilda as inspiration for both Brunnhild and Kriemhild, two rival characters from the Nibelungenlied. Kriemhild married Siegfried, who in many respects resembles Sigebert, Brunhilda's husband. There is resemblance between a multitude of characters and events in the Nibelungenlied and those of the latter half of the sixth century in Merovingian Gaul. As Thomas Hodgkin remarks:

“ Treasures buried in long departed days by kings of old, mysterious caves, reptile guides or reptile guardians - are we not transported by this strange legend into the very atmosphere of the Niebelungen Lied? And if the good king Gunthram passed for the fortunate finder of the Dragon-hoard, his brothers and their queens, by their wars, their reconciliations and their terrible avengings, must surely have suggested the main argument of that most tragical epic, the very name of one of whose heroines, Brunichildis, is identical with the name of the queen of Austrasia.[10] ”

[edit]See also

Barberini ivory

Forrás / Source:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunhilda_of_Austrasia

Mrs-Carloman of the Palace of Austrasia *-6710 was born about 568 in of,Belgium. She married Carloman Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia *-6706.

[Notes]

They had the following children:

M i Pepin de Landen Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia *-6715
http://www.angelfire.com/fl/Sumter/pafg290.htm#8929

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunhilda_of_Austrasia

http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunegilda

Brunegilda o Brunequilda, a veces llamada Brunilda (Toledo, 543 – Renève, 613), princesa visigoda hija de Atanagildo y Gosuinda. Por matrimonio llegó a ser reina de Austrasia. Participó en los conflictos y guerras contra Neustria causados por el asesinato de su hermana Galswinta, también conocida como Galsuinda o Galesvinta. Fue regente en Austrasia y Borgoña.

Los primeros años [editar]
Brunegilda tenía 11 años de edad cuando su padre Atanagildo (510–567) fue elegido rey visigodo de Hispania. Era la menor de las dos hijas del matrimonio real.

La princesa Brunegilda fue educada en la corte de Toledo, capital del reino visigodo, que gozaba de cierto prestigio en la época, y profesaba la fe cristiana arriana.

Las difíciles relaciones políticas entre francos y visigodos habían mejorado y alrededor del año 565 Sigeberto I, rey de Austrasia solicitó a Brunegilda en matrimonio. Sigeberto I contaba 30 años de edad.

Este matrimonio beneficiaba los intereses de ambos reinos. Al visigodo Atanagildo lo libraba de los problemas con los francos y le permitía concentrar sus luchas contra bizantinos y suevos; y al merovingio Sigeberto I lo reforzaba en los conflictos con sus hermanos. Sigeberto I era uno de los cuatro hijos de Clotario I, cuyo reino había sido dividido a su muerte.

Brunegilda aceptó cambiar su fe arriana por la fe católica y, aportando una buena dote, celebró su matrimonio en la ciudad de Metz —capital del reino de Austrasia— el año 566.

Escribió el obispo Gregorio de Tours (539–594), cronista de la época merovingia: «Era una joven de modales elegantes, de hermosa figura, honesta y decente en sus costumbres, de buen consejo y agradable conversación».

Con su incorporación a la dinastía merovingia comenzó, para la ahora reina de Austrasia, una vida difícil, llena de conspiraciones y con un trágico final.

La primera víctima [editar]

Al año siguiente se celebró el matrimonio de la hermana de Brunegilda, Galswinta, con el hermano de Sigeberto I, Chilperico I rey de Neustria, aportando también ella una generosa dote.

Este rey ya estaba casado con Audovera, con quien había tenido cuatro hijos, pero logró anular su matrimonio para casarse con Galswinta. Sin embargo, no abandonó a su amante Fredegunda. El matrimonio fracasó rápidamente debido a la actitud de Chilperico I, quien se negó a abandonar su disipada vida.

Galswinta quiso entonces regresar a la corte visigoda, pero ese mismo año murió su padre Atanagildo, debilitándose así su posición política, lo que resultó en su asesinato, atribuido a Fredegunda. Un tiempo más tarde Chilperico I contrajo matrimonio con Fredegunda.

El asesinato de su hermana provocó en Brunegilda un profundo rencor hacia ambos. Exigió a Chilperico I la devolución de la dote que había aportado Galswinta, pero el rey de Neustria se negó a hacerlo.

Sigeberto I apeló a su otro hermano, Gontrán I de Borgoña, para que mediara en el conflicto. Gontran reunió a un consejo de nobles y se resolvió entregar en compensación a Brunegilda y a sus descendientes, las ciudades de Burdeos, Limoges, Cahors, Bearn y Bigorra, que había recibido Galswinta como regalo de bodas. Pero el problema no se resolvió. Chilperico I aceptó de malas ganas la devolución de las ciudades y Brunegilda no olvidó el asesinato de su hermana.

Comienza la guerra fratricida [editar]

Entre 567 y 570 nacieron los tres hijos de Sigeberto I y Brunegilda: Ingunda, Clodosinda y Childeberto II.

Las rencillas entre Sigeberto I y su hermano Chilperico I continuaron, esta vez atizadas por ambas reinas consortes, Brunegilda y Fredegunda. El obispo de París, San Germán, intentó apaciguar el conflicto y escribió una carta a Brunegilda solicitándole su influencia, sin lograrlo.

En 575 Chilperico I intentó recuperar las cinco ciudades por la fuerza y en la lucha muere su hijo Teodoberto, un hijo que había tenido con Audovera. Sigeberto I comenzó la ocupación de Neustria; pero en un acto de audacia y astucia, Fredegunda envió a dos sicarios, que lo asesinaron justo cuando estaba a punto de obtener una completa victoria. Gracias a ello Chilperico I pudo recuperarse de la desesperada situación en la que se encontraba e incluso reclamar la posesión del reino de Austrasia.

Brunegilda, ahora viuda, se encontraba con sus hijos en Paris —capital del reino de Neustria— y fueron hechos prisioneros por Chilperico I, pero Brunegilda logró hacer escapar a su pequeño hijo Childeberto II y reclamó el trono de Austrasia para él y la regencia para ella.

La nobleza de Austrasia reconoció los derechos del heredero, pero no la aceptó como regente, nombrando en este cargo a Gontran de Borgoña.

Chilperico I separó a Brunegilda de sus hijas y la relegó a un convento en Ruán.

En un acto insólito, otro hijo de Chilperico I y Audovera, Meroveo II, que había participado en la huida del niño, se presentó en Ruán y contrajo matrimonio con Brunegilda.

El príncipe contaba 19 años de edad, ella 32 años. La ceremonia fue efectuada por el obispo de Ruán, Pretextato. Este matrimonio le acarrearía a Brunegilda la acusación de incesto y lascivia.

Chilperico I logró anular el matrimonio. Enfurecido con Meroveo, le prohibió el uso de armas y lo hizo tonsurar y ordenar sacerdote a la fuerza —lo que implicaba la pérdida del derecho de sucesión al trono— pero el príncipe logró escapar. Brunegilda intentó por todos los medios procurarle asilo en Austrasia, pero los nobles austrasianos se opusieron denodadamente, argumentando que hacerlo atraería las iras de Chilperico I. Después de muchas desventuras, Meroveo II, tenazmente perseguido por su propio padre y por Fredegunda, murió en 577. Se dijo que se hizo matar por uno de sus hombres ante el temor de perecer en el suplicio. El obispo Pretextato fue asesinado en 586. Ambas muertes se atribuyeron a conspiraciones de Fredegunda, quien también intentó asesinar a Brunegilda después de la anulación del matrimonio.

Primera regencia [editar]

Brunegilda regresó a la corte de Austrasia, pero el rechazo de los nobles la obligó a buscar refugio en la corte de Gontran de Borgoña, retornando un tiempo después para asumir la regencia por su hijo.

Comenzó entonces a actuar como soberana de Austrasia, organizando y mejorando la estructura del reino. Reparó caminos, construyó iglesias, abadías y castillos, reformó las finanzas y reorganizó el ejército, pero los gastos afectaron los intereses de los nobles y éstos le mostraron su hostilidad.

Brunegilda reaccionó imponiendo la autoridad de la corona. Para reafirmar esta autoridad, solicitó a Gontran de Borgoña —que no tenía hijos vivos— la adopción de su hijo Childeberto II, lo que el rey de Borgoña aceptó en 577.

En 579 casó a su hija Ingunda, de 13 años de edad, con el príncipe visigodo Hermenegildo, acabando este matrimonio en tragedia al morir ambos como consecuencia de las conspiraciones y luchas entre arrianos, católicos y bizantinos en Hispania.

Su hijo Childeberto II comenzó a reinar como soberano alrededor de 583, cumplidos los 13 años de edad.

La mano de hierro de la reina abuela [editar]

En 584 murió asesinado Chilperico I de Neustria. Se atribuyó este crimen tanto a Brunegilda como a Fredegunda. Esta última asumió la regencia de Neustria por su hijo recién nacido, Clotario II, y atentó nuevamente contra la vida de Brunegilda.

En 586 nació Teodeberto II y al año siguiente Teoderico II (Thierry en francés), ambos hijos de Childeberto II y nietos de Brunegilda. Su enemiga Fredegunda atentó nuevamente contra la vida del rey, la reina regente y el primer nieto.

La reina regente no sólo tenía enemigos en la corte de Neustria. Algunos nobles de Austrasia se le oponían firmemente. Los duques Rauching, Ursio y Berthefried, que se habían enfrentado a la reina anteriormente y habían conspirado para asesinar a Childeberto II, fueron ejecutados por orden de Brunegilda en 587.

Las relaciones entre Gontran de Borgoña y Childeberto II se deterioraron y se inició una lucha que terminó el año 587 firmando ambos el Tratado de Andelot, en el cual, entre otros acuerdos, se estableció la herencia recíproca de los reinos en caso de fallecimiento de alguna de las partes.

También en el año 587, el rey visigodo Recaredo I estableció una alianza con el rey Childeberto II y solicitó además en matrimonio a Clodosinda, hermana del rey. Brunegilda accedió bajo la condición de que el matrimonio debería ser aceptado –por razones políticas— por Gontran I, pero el rey de Borgoña se negó a hacerlo.

En 593 murió Gontran I y Childeberto II subió al trono de Borgoña. El joven rey intentó una guerra contra el reino de Neustria, pero fracasó. Brunegilda participó personalmente en las decisiones políticas que se tomaron.

En 596 murió envenenado Childeberto II a los 26 años de edad. Se atribuyó el crimen a Fredegunda. Otras fuentes nombran a una conspiración de nobles de Austrasia, e incluso se sospechó de Brunegilda.

Brunegilda reaccionó con rapidez y asumió nuevamente la regencia, esta vez por sus dos pequeños nietos. Teodeberto II se convirtió en rey de Austrasia y Teoderico II de Borgoña.

En 597 murió por enfermedad la reina rival Fredegunda, al regreso de una expedición militar victoriosa contra Austrasia, en Laffaux o Latofao. Su hijo Clotario II, que contaba 13 años de edad, fue nombrado rey de Neustria. Brunegilda intentó derrocar a Clotario II y asumir el poder de todos los reinos francos, pero no recibió suficiente apoyo y el intento fracasó.

En 599 por instigación de la nobleza de Austrasia, su nieto Teodeberto II, de 13 años de edad, asumió el trono y apartó a su abuela del poder, expulsándola de la corte de Austrasia. Brunegilda se refugió en la corte de Borgoña, en la ciudad de Orleans, donde fue bien recibida por su otro nieto, Teoderico II.

Las relaciones con la Iglesia [editar]

El rey de Austrasia y su madre Brunegilda establecieron buenas relaciones con el papa Gregorio I Magno, elegido en 590.

Existen tres cartas del pontífice enviadas a Brunegilda. En la primera, el pontífice comienza alabándola por ser una madre y reina ejemplar, y le solicita su patrocinio para el presbítero Candidus. En la tercera epístola, el papa le solicita su patrocinio para San Agustín de Canterbury, en su camino a evangelizar al pueblo de los anglos.

El obispo de Autun, San Desiderio, elegido en 596, criticaba con dureza las costumbres de la corte de Teoderico II, y de igual manera lo hizo con Brunegilda. La reina escribió al papa Gregorio I quejándose de la actitud de San Desiderio hacia su familia.

El obispo fue suspendido, pero continuó el conflicto entre el obispo, los soberanos y la nobleza de Borgoña. Años después, durante un sermón, San Desiderio criticó públicamente a Teoderico II y a Brunegilda, lo que resultó en su asesinato en 608, cometido por incondicionales de Teoderico II.

El monje irlandés San Columbano de Lexehuil se había establecido en 590 en el reino de Borgoña y con la aprobación del rey Gontran fundó varios conventos. Su regla era muy estricta y se encontraba en conflicto con los obispos y nobles francos.

Llegado el momento, se opuso a que el rey Teoderico II viviera en concubinato y lo incitó a buscar una esposa. La elegida fue Ermenberta o Ermenberga, hija del rey visigodo Witerico (o Viterico), pero la princesa fue rechazada por Brunegilda, repudiada finalmente por el rey y devuelta a Hispania sin su dote.

San Columbano decidió en una ocasión visitar la corte de Teoderico II en Autun. Brunegilda lo recibió con respeto y le solicitó una bendición para sus bisnietos que la acompañaban, hijos de Teoderico II.

El religioso se negó a hacerlo, aduciendo el origen ilegítimo de los niños y profetizó que nunca reinarían. La reina, ofendida, logró su expulsión del reino de Borgoña en 610.

Los últimos años [editar]

Brunegilda, cumplidos ya los 60 años de edad, continuaba dirigiendo las luchas por el poder entre los reinos francos. Las relaciones entre Teoderico II y Teodeberto II eran muy inestables, pero los hermanos se unían ocasionalmente para combatir a otros.

En dos batallas, una en Dormelles en 600 y otra en Étampes en 604, lograron la victoria sobre Clotario II de Neustria. En esta última batalla, librada el 25 de diciembre de 604, Teoderico II estuvo cercano a capturar y derrotar definitivamente a Clotario II, pero la nobleza de Austrasia lo forzó a firmar un tratado de paz a cambio de territorios.

Las relaciones entre los hermanos se fueron deteriorando cada vez más. Teodeberto II estaba influenciado por la nobleza de Austrasia y Teoderico II se guiaba más por el consejo de Brunegilda que por el de los nobles de Borgoña. La manzana de la discordia fue una disputa por territorios.

Teoderico II de Borgoña y su abuela Brunegilda tenían en 612 una posición de poder, con grandes territorios conquistados, y resolvieron atacar a Teodeberto II. Este rey perdió la guerra rápidamente durante ese mismo año.

Fue tonsurado —supuestamente por órdenes de Brunegilda— lo cual según las costumbres de la época lo inhabilitaba para reasumir el trono al menos hasta que le volviera a crecer el pelo, y encerrado en un monasterio junto a su hijo, donde murieron el mismo año. Se atribuyeron estas muertes a Brunegilda quien las habría ordenado para convertir a su nieto preferido Teoderico II en indiscutido rey de Austrasía, aunque las órdenes bien pudieron partir directamente del propio Teoderico II.

Es importante señalar que después de la muerte de Gregorio de Tours —ocurrida en el año 594— los cronistas que escribieron sobre Brunegilda ni siquiera fueron contemporáneos de ella —a diferencia del gran historiador de los Francos— y redactaron sus crónicas muchos años después de ocurridos los hechos. Se presume que por razones políticas, lo hicieron desde una perspectiva poco objetiva e intencionadamente desfavorable a Brunegilda pero, desgraciadamente, no hay demasiadas fuentes históricas alternativas que narren estos acontecimientos.

Teoderico II tomó el trono de Austrasia, pero a poco enfermó de disentería y murió a los 26 años de edad en 613, justo cuando se preparaba para atacar a Clotario II.

Brunegilda, ya de 70 años, reclamó entonces la corona para su bisnieto Sigeberto II y la regencia para ella, pero la nobleza de Austrasia dirigida por Pipino de Landen y el obispo de Metz, San Arnulfo, la rechazó y acordó una alianza con Clotario II de Neustria quien, a invitación de ambos, invadió militarmente el reino de Austrasia. También fue traicionada por Warnachaire, mayordomo de palacio de Borgoña, quien al mando de los ejércitos de ese reino, en vez de combatir a Clotario II, pactó con él —luego sería nombrado mayordomo de palacio de por vida por Clotario II.

Brunegilda, al verse sin apoyo militar, buscó la ayuda de las tribus germánicas que vivían a orillas del Rin, pero en su huida fue descubierta y apresada en Orbe, Jura por Herbon, un terrateniente que en teoría le debía fidelidad pero que la entregó a Clotario II. Fue sometida a juicio en Renève, donde se la responsabilizó de la muerte de muchas personas importantes; varias de esas muertes, en realidad, habían sido asesinatos ordenados por Fredegunda, la madre de Clotario II, y dos por Clotario II mismo.

Según las crónicas, la anciana reina fue seguidamente sometida a tormentos de los que no se muere durante tres días; luego fue exhibida sobre un camello para la mofa del ejército de Clotario II y, finalmente, atada a la cola de un caballo que la arrastró hasta morir. Otras fuentes indican que fue desmembrada entre cuatro caballos, lo cual podría ser más probable dado que era una muerte más atroz y visto el odio de Clotario II hacia Brunegilda.

La reina Brunegilda murió el 13 de octubre de 613. Sus restos fueron incinerados y sus cenizas depositadas en un sarcófago en la abadía de San Martín en Autun, fundada por ella en 602. Hoy reposan en el Museo Rolin en Aviñón.

La derrota y el suplicio de Brunegilda, más que el triunfo de Clotario II, representaron la victoria de la aristocracia terrateniente de Austrasia y de Borgoña, con la cual Clotario II —que nunca hubiera podido ganar con sus menguadas fuerzas de Neustria— tuvo que pactar para que traicionaran a la reina. En razón de estos pactos, la monarquía merovingia, en teoría unida en la persona del hijo de Fredegunda, quedó seriamente debilitada, como lo prueba el hecho de que en el año 614 Clotario II tuviese que dar el Concilio de París, por el cual la corona autolimitaba sus facultades en provecho de los señores y el clero.

Es en esta época cuando el cargo de Mayordomo de Palacio cambia sutilmente su naturaleza: hasta aquí, había sido el representante del Rey ante los nobles, totalmente sujeto a la autoridad del monarca merovingio. El rey lo nombraba y podía destituirlo. A partir de 613, el Mayordomo de Palacio se va convirtiendo en el representante de los nobles ante el Rey y son aquellos los que le imponen al Rey su elección.

A Clotario II lo sucederá su hijo Dagoberto I, quien por unos años logrará retrasar la pérdida de poder de la dinastía reinante —disgustado con Pipino de Landen en 629, aún tuvo el poder de destituirlo sumariamente de la Mayordomía de Palacio de Austrasia— pero ya a su muerte ocurrida en 639 dejando dos hijos pequeños, el gobierno pasará a manos de los mayordomos de palacio, cargo por el que los nobles competirán entre sí. Uno de ellos, Pipino de Heristal, descendiente de aquel Pipino de Landen que traicionó a Brunegilda, estará llamado a acaudillar a los nobles de Austrasia, obtendrá una victoria decisiva contra el mayordomo de palacio de Neustria en la batalla de Tertry (687) y despojará a los merovingios de todo poder efectivo, dejándoles de reyes sólo el título y la larga cabellera.

Para ser objetivos, no se puede dejar de mencionar la interpretación alternativa de Montesquieu, quien en su obra El espíritu de las leyes describe los hechos de 613 como «revolución» contra Brunegilda y no como «traición». Para él, Brunegilda se había hecho odiosa al «pueblo» de Austrasia y Borgoña, entendido el «pueblo» en un sentido restrictivo, que sólo comprendía a los nobles terratenientes y al alto clero, que subsumían en sus dominios rurales a la inmensa mayoría de la población campesina. En efecto, los terratenientes odiaban a Brunequilda porque la reina quería organizar el Estado según un modelo de funcionamiento más centralizado, cobrar impuestos para poder hacer caminos, reparar fortalezas, realizar otras obras públicas y reorganizar el ejército, mientras que ellos ansiaban ser amos y señores independientes en sus respectivos latifundios.

Hay un hecho incontrastable: estos nobles pactaron con Clotario II, Rey de Neustria, reino que estaba enfrentado desde hacía muchos años con los reinos de Austrasia y Borgoña a los que esos nobles pertenecían. Ellos debían fidelidad a los hijos de Teoderico II pero, como parte del trato, los entregaron para que fueran asesinados por orden de Clotario II. Tuvieron la excusa de la bastardía de los pequeños, ya que eran hijos de Teoderico II con una concubina, y así se autocumplió la profecía de San Columbano de que nunca reinarían. Sin embargo, no era en absoluto extraño entre los Francos de aquella época, que un hijo bastardo pudiera reinar y, pruebas al canto, Teodorico I de Austrasia, hijo bastardo de Clodoveo I, heredó según el testamento de su padre, la porción más extensa de la partición realizada a la muerte del gran rey merovingio.

Por estas razones en lo sucesivo aquí se hablará de «traición» y no de «revolución», pero queda hecha la salvedad, en aras de la objetividad, de que existen otras interpretaciones.

En realidad, la traición de la aristocracia de Austrasia y de Borgoña contra Brunegilda y sus pequeños bisnietos, que Clotario II legitimó al servirse de ella para hacer perecer cruelmente a la reina, fue sólo el primer acto de la traición de dicha aristocracia contra la monarquía merovingia en general, la cual se perfeccionaría en 751 con la deposición del rey títere Childerico III y la toma de la corona por el carolingio Pipino el Breve.

Nótese que Pipino el Breve necesitó de la anuencia de la Iglesia Católica en la persona del Papa Zacarías para deponer a Childerico III, y ello fue porque con el bautismo de Clodoveo I el 25 de diciembre de 496, al que siguió el de 3.000 de sus guerreros, la Iglesia Católica había legitimado que sólo los descendientes de Clodoveo podían reinar sobre los Francos. Entonces, para abjurar de esta arraigada tradición que llevaba dos siglos y medio de duración, fue necesaria la dispensa de la propia Iglesia, a pesar de que Pipino el Breve era ya rey en los hechos, salvo de nombre.

Es engañoso el rótulo de «reyes holgazanes» que se les ha dado a los últimos merovingios. La realidad es que nada podían hacer aunque quisieran. Así es como a algunos de los descendientes de Clotario II —Childerico II, Dagoberto II— cuando pretenden ejercer alguna autoridad efectiva, simplemente se los asesina, tal es la pérdida de respeto por la monarquía en que se ha caído. A Chilperico II, por ejemplo, que fue rey entre 715 y 717 y entre 719 y 721, se lo vio personalmente al frente de sus ejércitos junto al fiel duque Eudes de Aquitania, e intentó ejercer la autoridad que le correspondía, pero fue vencido por el gran Mayordomo de Palacio Carlos Martel, hijo bastardo de Pipino de Heristal, padre de Pipino el Breve y abuelo del gran Carlomagno.

En el fondo, el mayor error de Brunegilda ha sido, entonces, el querer imponer un gobierno centralizado al estilo romano a unos terratenientes que buscaban hacerse independientes del poder central, en una época en que las ciudades estaban en total decadencia; de ahí su triste final.

Otra paradoja del suplicio de Brunegilda es que, siendo el triunfo de Clotario II en teoría el de Neustria sobre Austrasia, se dio en condiciones tales que asoció firmemente a los pipínidos a la mayordomía de palacio de Austrasia, en un momento en el que la monarquía autolimitó su poder, por lo que la victoria de Clotario II fue aparentemente completa, pero en verdad pírrica, porque sembró las semillas del posterior predominio absoluto de Austrasia sobre Neustria.

FUENTES:

-http://www.abcgenealogia.com/Godos00.html

Brunhilda[1] (c. 543 – 613) was a Frankish queen who ruled the eastern kingdoms of Austrasia and Burgundy in the names of her sons and grandsons. Initially known as a liberal ruler of great political acumen, she became notorious for her cruelty and avarice.

Brunhilda (c. 543 – 613) was a Visigothic princess, married to king Sigebert I of Austrasia who ruled the eastern kingdoms of Austrasia and Burgundy in the names of her sons and grandsons. Initially known as a liberal ruler of great political acumen, she became notorious for her cruelty and avarice.
b. c. 534
d. 613, Renève, Burgundy [now in France]

also spelled BRUNHILDA, BRUNHILDE, OR BRUNECHILDIS, French BRUNEHAUT,queen of the Frankish kingdom of Austrasia, daughter of the Visigothic king Athanagild, and one of the most forceful figures of the Merovingian Age.

In 567 Brunhild married Sigebert I, king of Austrasia, changing her religion from Arianism to Roman Catholicism. In the same year, her sister Galswintha married Sigebert's half brother Chilperic I, king of the western part of the Frankish territory, but in 567 or 568, at the instigation of his concubine Fredegund, Chilperic had Galswintha murdered. Prompted by Brunhild, Sigebert then exacted Galswintha's marriage settlement (Bordeaux, Limoges, Quercy, Béarn, and Bigorre) as retribution from Chilperic. When Chilperic tried to recover this territory, war broke out between him and Sigebert (573). At first it ran in Sigebert's favour, but in 575 he was assassinated and Brunhild was imprisoned at Rouen. There, however, Merovech, one of Chilperic's sons, went through a form of marriage with her (576). Chilperic soon had this union dissolved, but Brunhild was allowed to go to Metz in Austrasia,where her young son Childebert II had been proclaimed king. There she was to assert herself against the Austrasian magnates for the next 30 years.

After Childebert's death (595 or 596), Brunhild failed to set herself up as guardian over Childebert's elder son, Theodebert II of Austrasia, and thus stirred up against him his brother Theodoric II, who had succeeded to Burgundy. Theodebert was finally overthrown in 612, but Theodoric died soon afterward (613), whereupon Brunhild tried to make the latter's eldest son, the 12-year-old Sigebert II, king of Austrasia. The Austrasian magnates, reluctant to endure her tyrannous regency, appealed to Chlotar II of Neustria against her. Brunhild tried in vain to enlist the help of the tribes east of the Rhine, then fled to Burgundy, but was handed over to Chlotar at Renève (northeast of Dijon). She was tortured for three days, bound on to a camel and exposed to the mockery of the army, and finally dragged to death at a horse's tail (autumn 613).

Copyright c 1994-2001 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Brunhilda[1] (c. 543 – 613) was a Frankish queen who ruled the eastern kingdoms of Austrasia and Burgundy in the names of her sons and grandsons. Initially known as a liberal ruler of great political acumen, she became notorious for her cruelty and avarice.
Brunechildis the Visigoth1
b. 543, d. 13 October 613

Father Athanagildus, rex Gotthorum1,2,3 b. circa 510, d. 567

Mother Goiswinth (?)1 b. circa 514

Brunechildis the Visigoth was born in 543 at Tolèdo.3 She was the daughter of Athanagildus, rex Gotthorum and Goiswinth (?).1,2,3 Brunechildis the Visigoth married Sigibertus I, rex Austrasii, son of Chlothacharius I, gracia Dei Francorum rex and Ingundis (?), in 566 at Metz, Austrasia; "Brunhild married Sigebert I, king of Austrasia, changing her religion from Arianism to Roman Catholicism."4,1,5 Brunechildis the Visigoth was a witness where Chilpericus I, rex Francorum, vir inluster murdered his first wife Galswintha in order to marry her maid, Fredegund, and his brother, husband of Galswintha's sister, was obliged to seek revenge, and a terrible civil war broke out between the brothers in 568. Brunechildis the Visigoth witnessed the death of Sigibertus I, rex Austrasii in November 575 at Vitry, France; Assassinated in a family blood-fued by his brother Chilperic. Chilperic had his wife, Galswintha, murdered so he could marry her maid. Sigebert was married to Brunhild, sister of Galswintha. On Sigebert's death, Brunhild continued seeking revenge.6,3 Brunechildis the Visigoth was was imprisoned by Chilperic after November 575 at Rouen, France. She married Subking Merovech des Francs, son of Chilpericus I, rex Francorum, vir inluster and Audovère (?), in 576 at Rouen, France; After her husband Sigebert was assassinated by his brother Chilperic who had married and murdered her sister, and she imprisoned by him, Merovech, the son of Chilperic by an earlier wife, married her. This marriage was shortlived but Brunhild was freed to go to Metz.1,3 Brunechildis the Visigoth witnessed the engagement of Childeberthus II, King of Austrasia and Burgundy and Theodelinde, Langobardenkönigin circa 587; Betrothed to Childebert, but his mother, Brunhild, convinced him to reject the marriage. Brunechildis the Visigoth was was involved in a succession dispute in 596. This dispute would lead ultimately to her death. After Childebert's death, Brunhild failed to set herself up as guardian over Childebert's elder son, Theodebert II of Austrasia, and thus stirred up against him his brother Theodoric II, who had succeeded to Burgundy.4 She witnessed the marriage contract of Theudericus II, King of Austrasia and Burgundy and Ermenberga the Visigoth in 606; This would have been his 2nd, but Brunhild, his grandmother, and her granddaughter Theudila, his own sister, prevented it's consummation.1,7 Brunechildis the Visigoth remained involved in the bitter dispute of the Merovingian family in 612. Now the dispute is clearly of her own making. Theodebert, the King she was supporting, was finally overthrown in 612, but Theodoric, the successor, died soon afterward in 613, whereupon Brunhild tried to make the latter's eldest son, the 12-year-old Sigebert II, king of Austrasia. The Austrasian magnates, reluctant to endure her tyrannous regency, appealed to Chlotar II of Neustria against her. Brunhild tried in vain to enlist the help of the tribes east of the Rhine, then fled to Burgundy, but was handed over to Chlotar at Renève, northeast of Dijon. It was here she would meet her end.4 She died on 13 October 613 at Renève, Burgundy, France, at age 70 years. She was tortured for three days, bound on to a camel and exposed to the mockery of the army, and finally dragged to death at a horse's tail.4,2,3
Family 1

Sigibertus I, rex Austrasii b. 535, d. November 575

Children

Ingonde des Francs+ b. c 5591,8

Chlodoswinthe des Francs+ b. 5691,3

Childeberthus II, King of Austrasia and Burgundy+ b. 570, d. 5961,2,3

Family 2

Subking Merovech des Francs b. 558, d. 577

Citations

[S231] Ian Wood, The Merovingian Kings, Prosopography, pg. 350-363.

[S269] C. W. Previté-Orton sCMH I, pg. 154, genealogy table 5 (a)..

[S467] GdRdF, online http://jeanjacques.villemag.free.fr/

[S172] Various Encyclopaedea Britannica.

[S1196] Historia Francorum, online http://hbar.phys.msu.su/gorm/chrons/georflor.htm, LVII.

[S440] Léon van der Essen, Deux Mille, Gen Table I.

[S467] GdRdF, online http://jeanjacques.villemag.free.fr/, Though this makes it seem she was the only wife, and mother of his children..

[S1405] Various EB CD 2004, Leovigild.

Frankish queen, wife of Sigebert I of the East Frankish kingdom of Austrasia; daughter of Athanagild, the Visigothic king of Spain. After the murder (567) of her sister Galswintha, who was the wife of Sigebert's brother Chilperic I of the West Frankish kingdom of Neustria, and Chilperic's marriage to his mistress Fredegunde, Brunhilda was the major instigator in the war against Neustria. The struggle continued between Brunhilda and Fredegunde after the death (575) of Sigebert and the murder (584) of Chilperic. Throughout the reigns of her son, Childebert II, and of two grandsons, Brunhilda was the actual ruler of Austrasia and of Burgundy, when by her design that country was united with Austrasia after the death (592) of King Guntram. She was endowed with the gifts of a great statesman, but her unscrupulousness in the execution of her plans earned her the fierce hatred of the nobles, whom she nonetheless controlled. She was finally betrayed by them to Fredegunde's son, Clotaire II of Neustria. He put her to a horrible death.

Brunchildis ("Brunhild"): "After the death of her husband, Brunhild, regent for her five-year-old son, Childebert, began

her twenty-eight year career as deputy ruler of Austrasia and later Burgundy...." - "The Birth of France...," Katharine

Scherman (NY: Random House, 1987), p. 178. She incited her husband to war against Chilperic, king of Neustria, who

had murdered his wife (Galeswintha, Brunhild's sister) in order to marry his mistress (Fredegund, who later had Sigibert

killed!).

b. c. 534
d. 613, Renève, Burgundy [now in France]

also spelled BRUNHILDA, BRUNHILDE, OR BRUNECHILDIS, French BRUNEHAUT,queen of the Frankish kingdom of Austrasia, daughter of the Visigothic king Athanagild, and one of the most forceful figures of the Merovingian Age.

In 567 Brunhild married Sigebert I, king of Austrasia, changing her religion from Arianism to Roman Catholicism. In the same year, her sister Galswintha married Sigebert's half brother Chilperic I, king of the western part of the Frankish territory, but in 567 or 568, at the instigation of his concubine Fredegund, Chilperic had Galswintha murdered. Prompted by Brunhild, Sigebert then exacted Galswintha's marriage settlement (Bordeaux, Limoges, Quercy, Béarn, and Bigorre) as retribution from Chilperic. When Chilperic tried to recover this territory, war broke out between him and Sigebert (573). At first it ran in Sigebert's favour, but in 575 he was assassinated and Brunhild was imprisoned at Rouen. There, however, Merovech, one of Chilperic's sons, went through a form of marriage with her (576). Chilperic soon had this union dissolved, but Brunhild was allowed to go to Metz in Austrasia,where her young son Childebert II had been proclaimed king. There she was to assert herself against the Austrasian magnates for the next 30 years.

After Childebert's death (595 or 596), Brunhild failed to set herself up as guardian over Childebert's elder son, Theodebert II of Austrasia, and thus stirred up against him his brother Theodoric II, who had succeeded to Burgundy. Theodebert was finally overthrown in 612, but Theodoric died soon afterward (613), whereupon Brunhild tried to make the latter's eldest son, the 12-year-old Sigebert II, king of Austrasia. The Austrasian magnates, reluctant to endure her tyrannous regency, appealed to Chlotar II of Neustria against her. Brunhild tried in vain to enlist the help of the tribes east of the Rhine, then fled to Burgundy, but was handed over to Chlotar at Renève (northeast of Dijon). She was tortured for three days, bound on to a camel and exposed to the mockery of the army, and finally dragged to death at a horse's tail (autumn 613).

Copyright c 1994-2001 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

RAINHA DA AUSTRÁSIA-LORENA, em França
Brunhilda was possibly born about 543 in the Visigothic capital of Toledo, the younger of the two daughters of Athanagild and Goiswintha. She was only eleven years old when her father was elevated to the kingship in 554. She was educated in Toledo as an Arian Christian.
First marriage[edit] In 567, she was married to King Sigebert I of Austrasia, a grandson of Clovis I, who had sent an embassy to Toledo loaded with gifts. She joined him at Metz. Upon their marriage, she converted to Catholicism.

Sigebert's father, Chlothar I, had reunited the four kingdoms of the Franks, but when he died, Sigebert and his three brothers divided them again. According to historian and bishop Gregory of Tours, Sigebert's marriage to a Visigothic princess was a criticism of his brothers' choices in wives. Instead of marrying a low-born woman, Sigebert chose a princess of education and morals.

In response to Sigebert's noble marriage, his brother King Chilperic of Neustria (Soissons) sent for Brunhilda's sister, Galswintha. Gregory of Tours suggests that he proposed because he envied his brother's marriage to Brunhilda;[3] however, Galswintha ordered him to purge his court of courtesans and mistresses and he soon grew tired of her. He and his favorite mistress, Fredegund, conspired to murder her. Galswintha was strangled to death in her bed as she slept by an unknown assailant and Chilperic married Fredegund.

Brunhilda so detested Fredegund for the death of her sister—and this hatred was so fiercely reciprocated—that the two queens persuaded their husbands to go to war.[4] Sigebert persuaded their other brother, the elder Guntram of Burgundy, to mediate the dispute between the queens. He decided that Galswintha's dower of Bordeaux, Limoges, Cahors, Béarn, and Bigorre should be turned over to Brunhilda in restitution. However, Chilperic did not easily give up the cities and Brunhilda did not forget the murder. Bishop Germain of Paris negotiated a brief peace between them.

Between 567 and 570, Brunhilda bore Sigebert three children: Ingund, Chlodosind, and Childebert.

The peace was then broken by Chilperic, who invaded Sigebert's dominions. Sigebert defeated Chilperic, who fled to Tournai. The people of Paris hailed Sigebert as a conqueror when he arrived with Brunhilda and their children. Bishop Germain wrote to Brunhilda, asking her to persuade her husband to restore the peace and to spare his brother. Chroniclers of his life say that she ignored this; certainly Sigebert set out to besiege Tournai. Fredegund responded to this threat to her husband by hiring two assassins, who killed Sigebert at Vitry-en-Artois with poisoned daggers (scramsaxi, according to Gregory). Brunhilda was captured and imprisoned at Rouen.

Second marriage[edit] Merovech, the son of Chilperic and his first wife Audovera, went to Rouen on pretext of visiting his mother. While there, he decided to marry the widowed Brunhilda and thus strengthen his chances of becoming a king. His stepmother, Fredegund, was determined that only her sons should succeed as kings and eliminated her husband's sons by other women. Merovech and Brunhilda were married by the Bishop of Rouen, Praetextatus. However, since Brunhilda was Merovech's aunt the marriage was contrary to canon law.

Chilperic soon besieged them in the church of St Martin on the walls. Eventually he made peace with them, but he took Merovech away with him to Soissons. In an effort to nullify the marriage, Chilperic had Merovech tonsured and sent to the monastery of Le Mans to become a priest. Merovech fled to the sanctuary of St Martin at Tours, which was Gregory's church (who was thus an eyewitness to these events), and later to Champagne. He finally returned to Tours in 578 and when his bid for power failed, he asked his servant to kill him.

First regency[edit] Brunhilda now tried to seize the regency of Austrasia in the name of her son Childebert II, but she was resisted fiercely by her nobles and had to retire briefly to the court of Guntram of Burgundy before obtaining her goal. At that time, she ruled Austrasia as queen. Not being a fighter, she was primarily an administrative reformer, with a Visigothic education. She repaired the old Roman roads, built many churches and abbeys, constructed the necessary fortresses, reorganised the royal finances, and restructured the royal army. However, she antagonised the nobles by her continued imposition of royal authority wherever it was lax. To reinforce her positions and the crown's prestige and power, she convinced Guntram, newly heirless, to adopt Childebert as his own son and heir. This he did in 577.[9] In 579, she married her daughter Ingunda, then only thirteen, to the Visigothic prince Hermenegild, allying her house to that of the king of her native land. However, Hermenegild converted to Catholicism and he and his wife both died in the ensuing religious wars which tore apart the Visigothic kingdom in Spain.

Brunhilda ruled Austrasia until Childebert came of age in 583, at the traditional Merovingian majority of thirteen.

Relations with King Guntram[edit] The conflict with Fredegund flared up once more upon the death of Chilperic. Now in the regency in Neustria, Fredegund was in a position to renew the war with her old enemy. Simultaneously, Brunhilda had to deal with her own internal enemies.

Many of the dukes strongly opposed her influence over her son Childebert, the king. Three of them—Rauching, Ursio, and Berthefrid—conspired to assassinate Childebert; however, their plot was found out. Rauching was killed and Ursio and Berthefrid fled to a fortress. Upon this, Guntram immediately begged for Childebert, Brunhilda, and Childebert's two sons to take refuge at his court. This they did and soon Ursio and Berthefrid were killed. In 587, Guntram, Childebert, and Brunhild settled the Pact of Andelot[10] securing for Childebert the Burgundian succession and a continuing alliance of the two realms of Austrasia and Burgundy for the rest of Guntram's life.

In that same year, King Reccared I of the Visigoths sent embassies to both Childebert and Guntram, the former accepting them and consolidating an alliance and the latter refusing to see them. Thus, when Brunhilda and Childebert negotiated a marriage for the king's sister Chlodosind with the king of Spain, it was rejected by Guntram and abandoned. In 592, Guntram died and Childebert, as per the treaty, succeeded to his kingdom, immediately making war on Clotaire II of Neustria, Chilperic's son of Fredegund. Childebert died in 596 at the age of twenty-six.

Second regency Upon Childebert's death, Brunhilda attempted to govern Austrasia and Burgundy in the name of her grandsons Theudebert II and Theuderic II. Theudebert became king of Austrasia, and Theuderic, king of Burgundy. Though she attributed the death of Childebert to Fredegund, the latter died in 597 and the direct conflict between her and Brunhilda ended. Peace would elude the Franks, however, for many years more as the conflict raged between the two queens' descendants.

In 599, Brunhilda's elder grandson, Theudebert, at whose court she was staying, exiled her. She was found wandering near Arcis in Champagne by a peasant, who brought her to Theuderic. The peasant was rewarded with the bishopric of Auxerre, as the legend goes. Theuderic welcomed her and readily fell under her influence, which was now inclined to vengeance against Theudebert. Soon the brothers were at war.

It is at this point that Brunhilda, now in her later fifties and having survived all the previous tribulations, began to display that ruthlessness which led to her especially violent demise. Brunhilda first took Protadius as lover and, desiring to promote him to high office, conspired to have Berthoald, the mayor of the palace, killed. In 604, she convinced Theuderic to send Berthoald to inspect the royal villae along the Seine. Clotaire, in accordance with Brunhilda's bidding, sent his own mayor Landric (ironically, a former paramour of Fredegund) to meet Berthoald, who had only a small contingent of men with him. Realising that he had been the victim of courtly plotting, Berthoald, in the ensuing confrontation, overchased the enemy until he was surrounded and killed. Protadius was promptly put in his place.

Brunhilda and Protadius soon persuaded Theuderic to return to war with Theudebert, but the mayor was murdered by his warriors, who did not wish to fight to assuage the ego of the queen. The man who ordered Protadius' execution, Duke Uncelen, was soon arrested by Brunhilda and tortured and executed. He was not the first ducal victim of the queen's revenges.

It was also during these later regencies that Desiderius, Bishop of Vienne (later Saint Didier) publicly accused her of incest and cruelty. Desiderius finally enraged her with a pointed sermon on chastity preached in 612 before her and Theuderic, with whom she then hired three assassins to murder the bishop at the village now-called Saint-Didier-sur-Chalaronne.

In that year, at the battle of Tolbiac, Theuderic defeated and captured Theudebert, whom the queen[who?] was now claiming was in fact the son of a gardener, and brought him and his royal paraphernalia to Brunhilda, who subsequently had him put up in a monastery. She probably also then had him murdered (along with his son Merovech) to allow Theuderic to succeed to both thrones unhindered. This he did, shortly thereafter dying of dysentery in his Austrasian capital of Metz, in late 613.

The murder of Brunhilda, from De Casibus Virorum Illustrium, attributed to Maître François, Paris, c. 1475 Third regency The successor of Theuderic II was his bastard son Sigebert, a child. The mayor of the palace of Austrasia, Warnachar, fearing that at his young age he would fall under the influence of his great-grandmother, brought him before a national assembly, where he was proclaimed king by the nobles, who then did homage to him ruling over both his father's kingdoms. Nonetheless, he could not be kept out of the influence of Brunhilda. Thus, for the last time in a long life (now in her seventies), she was regent of the Franks, this time for her own great-grandson.

But Warnachar and Rado, mayor of the palace of Burgundy, along with Pepin of Landen and Arnulf of Metz, resentful of her regency, abandoned the cause of Brunhilda over the young king and joined with her old antagonist Clotaire II, promising not to rise in defence of the queen-regent and recognising Clotaire as rightful regent and guardian of Sigebert. Brunhilda, with Sigebert, met Clotaire's army on the Aisne, but the dukes yet again betrayed her: the Patrician Aletheus, Duke Rocco, and Duke Sigvald deserted her and she and her king had to flee. They fled as far as the city of Orbe (in today French Switzerland), hoping to enlist the aid of certain German tribes, but Clotaire's minions caught up with them by Lake Neuchâtel. The young king and his brother Corbo were both killed: thus ended the long and bloody feud between Austrasia and Neustria, and, reuniting the two kingdoms, Clotaire held the entire realm of the Franks.

Clotaire then accused Brunhilda of the death of ten kings of the Franks. The identity of the ten kings comes from the Fourth Book of the Chronicle of Fredegar. It is usually said to include Sigebert I, Chilperic I, Theudebert II, Theuderic II, Sigebert II, Merovech (Chilperic's son), Merovech (Theuderic's son), Corbo (Theuderic's son), and Childebert (Theuderic's son) and the sons of Theudebert; along with many churchmen, including Desiderius. According to the Liber Historiae Francorum:

Then the army of the Franks and Burgundians joined into one, all shouted together that death would be most fitting for the very wicked Brunhilda. Then King Clotaire ordered that she be lifted on to a camel and led through the entire army. Then she was tied to the feet of wild horses and torn apart limb from limb. Finally she died. Her final grave was the fire. Her bones were burnt.

One legend has her being dragged by a wild mare down the Roman road La Chaussée Brunehaut at Abbeville.

Religion[edit] Brunhilda was raised as an Arian Christian, but upon her marriage to Sigebert, converted to Roman Catholicism. In general, she protected the church and treated Pope Gregory the Great with great respect. He wrote a series of positive letters to her; in 597 he wrote to her about interdicting pagan rites such as tree worship. Gregory of Tours was another favoured cleric; he was a trusted courtier to her and her son from 587 until his death. She also took a keen personal interest in the bishoprics and monasteries within her dominion. This brought her into conflict with Columbanus, abbot of Luxeuil, whom she eventually exiled to Italy, where he founded Bobbio. Brunhilda also played a role in perpetuating the diocese of Maurienne as a suffragan bishopric of the archdiocese of Vienne. In 576, Brunhilda's protector, Sigebert's brother Guntram, had founded the new bishopric at Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne, separating the Maurienne Valley and the neighboring Susa Valley from the Diocese of Turin. The Bishop of Turin protested this to Brunhilda for more than twenty years, but even when Pope Gregory the Great supported his complaint in 599, Brunhilda dismissed it.

Brunhilda was buried in the Abbaye de St. Martin at Autun that she founded in 602 on the spot where the bishop of Tours had cut down a beech-tree that served as an object of pagan worship. The abbey was destroyed in 1793 and two parts of the cover of Brunhilda's sarcophagus are now in the Musée Lapidaire in Autun.

Brunhilda commissioned the building of several churches and the abbey of St. Vincent at Laon (founded in 580). She is also credited with founding the castle of Bruniquel and having a Roman road resurfaced near Alligny-en-Morvan (where the name of a nearby hill Terreau Bruneau is believed to be derived from hers). The part of Mauves-sur-Loire known as la Fontaine Bruneau is named after Brunhilda who may have cooled herself with the fountain's water when she suffered heat exhaustion.

In legend[edit] Many scholars have seen Brunhilda as inspiration for both Brunnhild and Kriemhild, two rival characters from the Nibelungenlied. Kriemhild married Siegfried, who in many respects resembles Sigebert, Brunhilda's husband. There is resemblance between a multitude of characters and events in the Nibelungenlied and those of the latter half of the sixth century in Merovingian Gaul. As Thomas Hodgkin remarks:

“ Treasures buried in long departed days by kings of old, mysterious caves, reptile guides or reptile guardians - are we not transported by this strange legend into the very atmosphere of the Niebelungen Lied? And if the good king Gunthram passed for the fortunate finder of the Dragon-hoard, his brothers and their queens, by their wars, their reconciliations and their terrible avengings, must surely have suggested the main argument of that most tragical epic, the very name of one of whose heroines, Brunichildis, is identical with the name of the queen of Austrasia.

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/VANDALS,%20SUEVI,%20VISIGOTHS.htm#BrunechildisVisigothdied613
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Brunhild Queen of Austrasia (1)

Born: 550 (1)

Marriage: Sigebert I of Metz on an unknown date (1)

Died: 613 at age 63 (1)

General Notes:

Brunhild, queen of the Frankish kingdom known as Austrasia (in present-day northeastern France and southwestern Germany), the daughter of Athanagild (reigned 554-67), king of the Visigoths in Spain. Brunhild was married to Sigebert I, the Merovingian king of Austrasia. Her sister Galswintha married Sigebert's brother Chilperic, ruler of the neighboring Frankish kingdom of Neustria. Fredegund, Chilperic's former concubine, caused Galswintha to be murdered; she then married Chilperic. Brunhild determined to avenge herself on Fredegund, and the annals of the next half century in Gaul are filled with the bloody deeds provoked by the enmity of the two women.

Brunhild and her husband were successful until Sigebert was murdered in 575 at the instigation of Fredegund. Brunhild herself was captured by Chilperic, but she escaped, returned to Austrasia, and governed as regent in the name of her son, Childebert II. After the death of her son, she ruled Austrasia in the name of her young grandson. Finally, the armies of Austrasia were overthrown in 613 by Clotaire II of Neustria, son of Fredegund; the aged queen herself was taken captive. For three days she was subjected to insult and torture, then bound to a wild horse and dragged to death.

Family Links

Spouses/Children:

Sigebert I of Metz

-1. Childebert II King of Austrasia and Burgundy+

Forrás / Source:

http://www.delmars.com/family/perrault/7371.htm

Brunhilda of Austrasia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Brunhilda" redirects here. For the figure of Germanic legend, see Brynhildr.

Brunhilda[1] (c. 543 – 613) was a Frankish queen who ruled the eastern kingdoms of Austrasia and Burgundy in the names of her sons and grandsons. Initially known as a liberal ruler of great political acumen, she became notorious for her cruelty and avarice.

Contents [hide]

1 Life

1.1 First marriage

1.2 Second marriage

1.3 First regency

1.4 Relations with King Guntram

1.5 Second regency

1.6 Third regency

2 Religion

3 In legend

4 See also

5 Notes

6 Further reading

7 Sources

[edit]Life

She was possibly born about 543 in Toledo, the Visigothic capital, the daughter of the Visigoth king Athanagild and Goiswintha, his queen. She was the younger of his two daughters. She was only eleven years old when her father was elevated to the kingship (554). She was educated in Toledo as an Arian Christian.

[edit]First marriage

In 567, she was married to king Sigebert I of Austrasia (a grandson of Clovis I) who had sent an embassy to Toledo loaded with gifts. She joined him at Metz. Upon her marriage, she abjured Arianism and converted to orthodox Roman Catholicism.[2]

Sigebert's father, Clotaire I, had reunited the four kingdoms of the Franks, but when he died, Sigebert and his three brothers divided them again. According to historian and bishop Gregory of Tours, Sigebert's marriage to a Visigothic princess was a criticism of his brothers' choices in wives. Instead of marrying low-born and promiscuous women, Sigebert contracted a princess of education and morals.

In response to Sigebert's noble marriage, his brother King Chilperic of Soissons sent to Spain for Brunhilda's sister, Galswintha. Gregory of Tours suggests that he proposed because he envied his brother's marriage to Brunhilda.[3] However, Galswintha ordered him to purge his court of prostitutes and mistresses and he soon grew tired of her. He and his favourite mistress, one Fredegund, conspired to murder her within the year. He then married Fredegund.

Brunhilda so detested Fredegund for the death of her sister—and this hatred was so fiercely reciprocated—that the two queens persuaded their husbands to go to war.[4] Sigebert persuaded their other brother, the elder Guntram of Burgundy, to mediate the dispute between the queens. He decided that Galswintha's dower of Bordeaux, Limoges, Cahors, Béarn, and Bigorre should be turned over to Brunhilda in restitution. However, Chilperic did not easily give up the cities and Brunhilda did not forget the murder. Germanus, Bishop of Paris, negotiated a brief peace between them. Between 567 and 570, Brunhilda bore Sigebert three children: Ingund, Chlodosind, and Childebert.

The peace was then broken by Chilperic, who invaded Sigebert's dominions. Sigebert defeated Chilperic, who fled to Tournai. The people of Paris hailed Sigebert as a conqueror when he went there with Brunhilda and their children. Germanus wrote to Brunhilda, asking her to persuade her husband to restore the peace and to spare his brother. Chroniclers of Germanus' life say that she ignored this; certainly Sigebert set out to besiege Tournai. Fredegund responded to this threat to her husband by hiring two assassins, who killed Sigebert at Vitry with poisoned daggers (scramasaxi, according to Gregory). Brunhilda was captured and imprisoned at Rouen.

[edit]Second marriage

When, after disobeying his father's direct orders, Merovech, the son of Chilperic and his first wife Audovera, went to Rouen on pretext of visiting his mother Audovera, he decided to marry the widowed Brunhilda. Thus he strengthened his chances of becoming a king. His stepmother, Fredegund, was determined that only her sons should succeed as kings, and she eliminated her husband's sons by other women. They were married by the bishop Praetextatus, though the marriage was contrary to canon law, as Gregory is quick to note,[5] Brunhilda being Merovech's aunt. Quickly, Chilperic besieged them in the church of St Martin on the walls. Eventually he made peace with them, but he took Merovech away with him to Soissons.

In an effort to nullify the marriage, Chilperic had Merovech tonsured and sent to the monastery of Le Mans to become a priest. Merovech fled to the sanctuary of St Martin at Tours, the church of Gregory (who is thus an eyewitness to these events),[6] and later Champagne. He finally returned to Tours in 578, and when his bid for power failed, he asked his servant to kill him.[7]

[edit]First regency

Brunhilda now tried to seize the regency of Austrasia in the name of her son Childebert II, but she was resisted fiercely by her nobles and had to retire briefly to the court of Guntram of Burgundy before obtaining her goal. At that time, she ruled Austrasia as queen. Not being a fighter, she was primarily an administrative reformer, with a Visigothic education. She repaired the old Roman roads, built many churches and abbeys, constructed the necessary fortresses, reorganised the royal finances, and restructured the royal army. However, she antagonised the nobles by her continued imposition of royal authority wherever it was lax. To reinforce her positions and the crown's prestige and power, she convinced Guntram, newly heirless, to adopt Childebert as his own son and heir. This he did in 577.[8] In 579, she married her daughter Ingunda, then only thirteen, to the Visigothic prince Hermenegild, allying her house to that of the king of her native land. However, Hermenegild converted to Catholicism and he and his wife both died in the ensuing religious wars which tore apart the Visigothic kingdom in Spain.

Brunhilda ruled Austrasia until Childebert came of age in 583, at the traditional Merovingian majority of thirteen.

[edit]Relations with King Guntram

The conflict with Fredegund flared up once more upon the death of Chilperic. Now in the regency in Neustria, Fredegund was in a position to renew the war with her old enemy. Simultaneously, Brunhilda had to deal with her own internal enemies.

Many of the dukes strongly opposed her influence over her son Childebert, the king. Three of them—Rauching, Ursio, and Berthefrid—conspired to assassinate Childebert; however, their plot was found out. Rauching was killed and Ursio and Berthefrid fled to a fortress. Upon this, Guntram immediately begged for Childebert, Brunhilda, and Childebert's new sons to take refuge at his court. This they did and soon Ursio and Berthefrid were killed. In 587, Guntram, Childebert, and Brunhild settled the Pact of Andelot[9] securing for Childebert the Burgundian succession and a continuing alliance of the two realms of Austrasia and Burgundy for the rest of Guntram's life.

In that same year, King Reccared I of the Visigoths sent embassies to both Childebert and Guntram, the former accepting them and consolidating an alliance and the latter refusing to see them for some reason or another. Thus, when Brunhilda and Childebert negotiated a marriage for the king's sister Chlodosind with the king of Spain, it was rejected by Guntram and abandoned. In 592, Guntram died and Childebert, as per the treaty, succeeded to his kingdom, immediately making war on Clotaire II of Neustria.

[edit]Second regency

Upon Childebert's death in September or October 595, Brunhilda attempted to govern Austrasia and Burgundy in the name of her grandsons Theudebert II and Theuderic II, respectively. Though she attributed the death of Childebert to Fredegund, the latter died in 597 and the direct conflict between her and Brunhilda ended. Peace would elude the Franks, however, for many years more as the conflict raged between the two queens' descendants.

In 599, Brunhilda's eldest grandson, Theudebert, at whose court she was staying, exiled her. She was found wandering near Arcis in Champagne by a peasant, who brought her to Theuderic. The peasant was rewarded with the bishopric of Auxerre, as the legend goes. Theuderic welcomed her and readily fell under her influence, which was now inclined to vengeance against Theudebert. Soon the brothers were at war.

It is at this point that Brunhilda, now in her later 50's and having survived all the previous tribulations, begins to display that ruthlessness which led to her especially violent demise. Brunhilda first took herself Protadius as lover and, desiring to promote him to high office, conspired to have Berthoald, the mayor of the palace, killed. In 604, she convinced Theuderic to send Berthoald to inspect the royal villae along the Seine. Clotaire, probably alerted by men of Brunhilda's bidding, sent his own mayor Landric (ironically, a former paramour of Fredegund) to meet Berthoald, who had only a small contingent of men with him. Realising that he had been the victim of courtly plotting, Berthoald, in the ensuing confrontation, overchased the enemy until he was surrounded and killed. Protadius was promptly put in his place.

Brunhilda and Protadius soon persuaded Theuderic to return to war with Theudebert, but the mayor was murdered by his warriors, who did not wish to fight to assuage the ego of queen. The man who ordered Protadius' execution, Duke Uncelen, was soon arrested by Brunhilda and tortured and executed. He was not the first ducal victim of the queen's revenges.

It was also during these later regencies that Desiderius, Bishop of Vienne (later Saint Didier) publicly accused her of incest and cruelty. Desiderius finally enraged her with a pointed sermon on chastity preached in 612 before her and Theuderic, with whom she then hired three assassins to murder the bishop at the village now-called Saint-Didier-sur-Chalaronne.

In that year, at the battle of Tolbiac, Theuderic defeated and captured Theudebert, whom the queen[who?] was now claiming was in fact the son of a gardener, and brought him and his royal paraphernalia to Brunhilda, who subsequently had him put up in a monastery. She probably also then had him murdered (along with his son Merovech) to allow Theuderic to succeed to both thrones unhindered. This he did, shortly thereafter then dying of dysentery in his Austrasian capital of Metz, in late 613.

Third regency

The successor of Theuderic II was his bastard son Sigebert, a child. The mayor of the palace of Austrasia, Warnachar, fearing that at his young age he would fall under the influence of his great-grandmother, brought him before a national assembly, where he was proclaimed king by the nobles, who then did homage to him ruling over both his father's kingdoms. Nonetheless, he could not be kept out of the influence of Brunhilda. Thus, for the last time in a long life (now in her 70's), she was regent of the Franks, this time for her own great-grandson.

But Warnachar and Rado, mayor of the palace of Burgundy, along with Pepin of Landen and Arnulf of Metz, resentful of her regency, abandoned the cause of Brunhilda over the young king and joined with her old antagonist Clotaire II, promising not to rise in defence of the queen-regent and recognising Clotaire as rightful regent and guardian of Sigebert. Brunhilda, with Sigebert, met Clotaire's army on the Aisne, but the dukes yet again betrayed her: the Patrician Aletheus, Duke Rocco, and Duke Sigvald deserted her and she and her king had to flee. They fled as far as the Orbe, hoping to enlist the aid of certain German tribes, but Clotaire's minions caught up with them by Lake Neuchâtel. The young king and his brother Corbo were both killed: Thus ended the long and bloody feud between Austrasia and Neustria, and, reuniting the two kingdoms, Clotaire held the entire realm of the Franks.

Clotaire then accused Brunhilda of the death of ten kings of the Franks The identity of the ten kings comes from the Fourth Book of the Chronicle of Fredegar. It is usually said to include Sigebert I, Chilperic I, Theudebert II, Theuderic II, Sigebert II, Merovech (Chilperic's son), Merovech (Theuderic's son), Corbo (Theuderic's son), and Childebert (Theuderic's son) and the sons of Theudebert. along with many churchmen, including Desiderius. According to the Liber Historiae Francorum:

"Then the army of the Franks and Burgundians joined into one, all shouted together that death would be most fitting for the very wicked Brunhilda. Then King Clotaire ordered that she be lifted on to a camel and led through the entire army. Then she was tied to the feet of wild horses and torn apart limb from limb. Finally she died. Her final grave was the fire. Her bones were burnt."

One legend has her being dragged by a wild mare down the Roman road La Chaussée Brunehaut at Abbeville.

[edit]Religion

Brunhilda was raised as an Arian Christian, but upon her marriage to Sigebert, converted to Roman Catholicism. In general, she protected the church and treated Pope Gregory the Great with great respect. He wrote a series of positive letters to her; in 597 he wrote to her about interdicting pagan rites such as tree worship. Gregory of Tours was another favoured cleric; he was a trusted courtier to her and her son from 587 until his death. She also took a keen personal interest in the bishoprics and monasteries within her dominion. This brought her into conflict with Columbanus, abbot of Luxeuil, whom she eventually exiled to Italy, where he founded Bobbio. Brunhilda also played a role in perpetuating the diocese of Maurienne as a suffragan bishopric of the archdiocese of Vienne. In 576, Brunhilda's protector, Sigebert's brother Guntram, had founded the new bishopric at Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne, separating the Maurienne Valley and the neighboring Susa Valley from the Diocese of Turin. The Bishop of Turin protested this to Brunhilda for more than twenty years, but even when Pope Gregory the Great supported his complaint in 599, Brunhilda dismissed it.

Brunhilda was buried in the Abbaye de St. Martin at Autun that she founded in 602 on the spot where the bishop of Tours had cut down a beech-tree that served as an object of pagan worship. The abbey was destroyed in 1793 and Brunhilda's sarcophagus is now in the Musée Lapidaire in Avignon.

Brunhilda commissioned the building of several churches and the abbey of St. Vincent at Laon (founded in 580). She is also credited with founding the castle of Bruniquel and having a Roman road resurfaced near Alligny-en-Morvan (where the name of a nearby hill Terreau Bruneau is believed to be derived from hers). The part of Mauves-sur-Loire known as la Fontaine Bruneau is named after Brunhilda who may have cooled herself with the fountain's water when she suffered heat exhaustion.

[edit]In legend

Many scholars have seen Brunhilda as inspiration for both Brunnhild and Kriemhild, two rival characters from the Nibelungenlied. Kriemhild married Siegfried, who in many respects resembles Sigebert, Brunhilda's husband. There is resemblance between a multitude of characters and events in the Nibelungenlied and those of the latter half of the sixth century in Merovingian Gaul. As Thomas Hodgkin remarks:

“ Treasures buried in long departed days by kings of old, mysterious caves, reptile guides or reptile guardians - are we not transported by this strange legend into the very atmosphere of the Niebelungen Lied? And if the good king Gunthram passed for the fortunate finder of the Dragon-hoard, his brothers and their queens, by their wars, their reconciliations and their terrible avengings, must surely have suggested the main argument of that most tragical epic, the very name of one of whose heroines, Brunichildis, is identical with the name of the queen of Austrasia.[10] ”

[edit]See also

Barberini ivory

Forrás / Source:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunhilda_of_Austrasia

Mrs-Carloman of the Palace of Austrasia *-6710 was born about 568 in of,Belgium. She married Carloman Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia *-6706.

[Notes]

They had the following children:

M i Pepin de Landen Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia *-6715 http://www.angelfire.com/fl/Sumter/pafg290.htm#8929

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunhilda_of_Austrasia

http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunegilda

Brunegilda o Brunequilda, a veces llamada Brunilda (Toledo, 543 – Renève, 613), princesa visigoda hija de Atanagildo y Gosuinda. Por matrimonio llegó a ser reina de Austrasia. Participó en los conflictos y guerras contra Neustria causados por el asesinato de su hermana Galswinta, también conocida como Galsuinda o Galesvinta. Fue regente en Austrasia y Borgoña.

Los primeros años [editar] Brunegilda tenía 11 años de edad cuando su padre Atanagildo (510–567) fue elegido rey visigodo de Hispania. Era la menor de las dos hijas del matrimonio real.

La princesa Brunegilda fue educada en la corte de Toledo, capital del reino visigodo, que gozaba de cierto prestigio en la época, y profesaba la fe cristiana arriana.

Las difíciles relaciones políticas entre francos y visigodos habían mejorado y alrededor del año 565 Sigeberto I, rey de Austrasia solicitó a Brunegilda en matrimonio. Sigeberto I contaba 30 años de edad.

Este matrimonio beneficiaba los intereses de ambos reinos. Al visigodo Atanagildo lo libraba de los problemas con los francos y le permitía concentrar sus luchas contra bizantinos y suevos; y al merovingio Sigeberto I lo reforzaba en los conflictos con sus hermanos. Sigeberto I era uno de los cuatro hijos de Clotario I, cuyo reino había sido dividido a su muerte.

Brunegilda aceptó cambiar su fe arriana por la fe católica y, aportando una buena dote, celebró su matrimonio en la ciudad de Metz —capital del reino de Austrasia— el año 566.

Escribió el obispo Gregorio de Tours (539–594), cronista de la época merovingia: «Era una joven de modales elegantes, de hermosa figura, honesta y decente en sus costumbres, de buen consejo y agradable conversación».

Con su incorporación a la dinastía merovingia comenzó, para la ahora reina de Austrasia, una vida difícil, llena de conspiraciones y con un trágico final.

La primera víctima [editar]

Al año siguiente se celebró el matrimonio de la hermana de Brunegilda, Galswinta, con el hermano de Sigeberto I, Chilperico I rey de Neustria, aportando también ella una generosa dote.

Este rey ya estaba casado con Audovera, con quien había tenido cuatro hijos, pero logró anular su matrimonio para casarse con Galswinta. Sin embargo, no abandonó a su amante Fredegunda. El matrimonio fracasó rápidamente debido a la actitud de Chilperico I, quien se negó a abandonar su disipada vida.

Galswinta quiso entonces regresar a la corte visigoda, pero ese mismo año murió su padre Atanagildo, debilitándose así su posición política, lo que resultó en su asesinato, atribuido a Fredegunda. Un tiempo más tarde Chilperico I contrajo matrimonio con Fredegunda.

El asesinato de su hermana provocó en Brunegilda un profundo rencor hacia ambos. Exigió a Chilperico I la devolución de la dote que había aportado Galswinta, pero el rey de Neustria se negó a hacerlo.

Sigeberto I apeló a su otro hermano, Gontrán I de Borgoña, para que mediara en el conflicto. Gontran reunió a un consejo de nobles y se resolvió entregar en compensación a Brunegilda y a sus descendientes, las ciudades de Burdeos, Limoges, Cahors, Bearn y Bigorra, que había recibido Galswinta como regalo de bodas. Pero el problema no se resolvió. Chilperico I aceptó de malas ganas la devolución de las ciudades y Brunegilda no olvidó el asesinato de su hermana.

Comienza la guerra fratricida [editar]

Entre 567 y 570 nacieron los tres hijos de Sigeberto I y Brunegilda: Ingunda, Clodosinda y Childeberto II.

Las rencillas entre Sigeberto I y su hermano Chilperico I continuaron, esta vez atizadas por ambas reinas consortes, Brunegilda y Fredegunda. El obispo de París, San Germán, intentó apaciguar el conflicto y escribió una carta a Brunegilda solicitándole su influencia, sin lograrlo.

En 575 Chilperico I intentó recuperar las cinco ciudades por la fuerza y en la lucha muere su hijo Teodoberto, un hijo que había tenido con Audovera. Sigeberto I comenzó la ocupación de Neustria; pero en un acto de audacia y astucia, Fredegunda envió a dos sicarios, que lo asesinaron justo cuando estaba a punto de obtener una completa victoria. Gracias a ello Chilperico I pudo recuperarse de la desesperada situación en la que se encontraba e incluso reclamar la posesión del reino de Austrasia.

Brunegilda, ahora viuda, se encontraba con sus hijos en Paris —capital del reino de Neustria— y fueron hechos prisioneros por Chilperico I, pero Brunegilda logró hacer escapar a su pequeño hijo Childeberto II y reclamó el trono de Austrasia para él y la regencia para ella.

La nobleza de Austrasia reconoció los derechos del heredero, pero no la aceptó como regente, nombrando en este cargo a Gontran de Borgoña.

Chilperico I separó a Brunegilda de sus hijas y la relegó a un convento en Ruán.

En un acto insólito, otro hijo de Chilperico I y Audovera, Meroveo II, que había participado en la huida del niño, se presentó en Ruán y contrajo matrimonio con Brunegilda.

El príncipe contaba 19 años de edad, ella 32 años. La ceremonia fue efectuada por el obispo de Ruán, Pretextato. Este matrimonio le acarrearía a Brunegilda la acusación de incesto y lascivia.

Chilperico I logró anular el matrimonio. Enfurecido con Meroveo, le prohibió el uso de armas y lo hizo tonsurar y ordenar sacerdote a la fuerza —lo que implicaba la pérdida del derecho de sucesión al trono— pero el príncipe logró escapar. Brunegilda intentó por todos los medios procurarle asilo en Austrasia, pero los nobles austrasianos se opusieron denodadamente, argumentando que hacerlo atraería las iras de Chilperico I. Después de muchas desventuras, Meroveo II, tenazmente perseguido por su propio padre y por Fredegunda, murió en 577. Se dijo que se hizo matar por uno de sus hombres ante el temor de perecer en el suplicio. El obispo Pretextato fue asesinado en 586. Ambas muertes se atribuyeron a conspiraciones de Fredegunda, quien también intentó asesinar a Brunegilda después de la anulación del matrimonio.

Primera regencia [editar]

Brunegilda regresó a la corte de Austrasia, pero el rechazo de los nobles la obligó a buscar refugio en la corte de Gontran de Borgoña, retornando un tiempo después para asumir la regencia por su hijo.

Comenzó entonces a actuar como soberana de Austrasia, organizando y mejorando la estructura del reino. Reparó caminos, construyó iglesias, abadías y castillos, reformó las finanzas y reorganizó el ejército, pero los gastos afectaron los intereses de los nobles y éstos le mostraron su hostilidad.

Brunegilda reaccionó imponiendo la autoridad de la corona. Para reafirmar esta autoridad, solicitó a Gontran de Borgoña —que no tenía hijos vivos— la adopción de su hijo Childeberto II, lo que el rey de Borgoña aceptó en 577.

En 579 casó a su hija Ingunda, de 13 años de edad, con el príncipe visigodo Hermenegildo, acabando este matrimonio en tragedia al morir ambos como consecuencia de las conspiraciones y luchas entre arrianos, católicos y bizantinos en Hispania.

Su hijo Childeberto II comenzó a reinar como soberano alrededor de 583, cumplidos los 13 años de edad.

La mano de hierro de la reina abuela [editar]

En 584 murió asesinado Chilperico I de Neustria. Se atribuyó este crimen tanto a Brunegilda como a Fredegunda. Esta última asumió la regencia de Neustria por su hijo recién nacido, Clotario II, y atentó nuevamente contra la vida de Brunegilda.

En 586 nació Teodeberto II y al año siguiente Teoderico II (Thierry en francés), ambos hijos de Childeberto II y nietos de Brunegilda. Su enemiga Fredegunda atentó nuevamente contra la vida del rey, la reina regente y el primer nieto.

La reina regente no sólo tenía enemigos en la corte de Neustria. Algunos nobles de Austrasia se le oponían firmemente. Los duques Rauching, Ursio y Berthefried, que se habían enfrentado a la reina anteriormente y habían conspirado para asesinar a Childeberto II, fueron ejecutados por orden de Brunegilda en 587.

Las relaciones entre Gontran de Borgoña y Childeberto II se deterioraron y se inició una lucha que terminó el año 587 firmando ambos el Tratado de Andelot, en el cual, entre otros acuerdos, se estableció la herencia recíproca de los reinos en caso de fallecimiento de alguna de las partes.

También en el año 587, el rey visigodo Recaredo I estableció una alianza con el rey Childeberto II y solicitó además en matrimonio a Clodosinda, hermana del rey. Brunegilda accedió bajo la condición de que el matrimonio debería ser aceptado –por razones políticas— por Gontran I, pero el rey de Borgoña se negó a hacerlo.

En 593 murió Gontran I y Childeberto II subió al trono de Borgoña. El joven rey intentó una guerra contra el reino de Neustria, pero fracasó. Brunegilda participó personalmente en las decisiones políticas que se tomaron.

En 596 murió envenenado Childeberto II a los 26 años de edad. Se atribuyó el crimen a Fredegunda. Otras fuentes nombran a una conspiración de nobles de Austrasia, e incluso se sospechó de Brunegilda.

Brunegilda reaccionó con rapidez y asumió nuevamente la regencia, esta vez por sus dos pequeños nietos. Teodeberto II se convirtió en rey de Austrasia y Teoderico II de Borgoña.

En 597 murió por enfermedad la reina rival Fredegunda, al regreso de una expedición militar victoriosa contra Austrasia, en Laffaux o Latofao. Su hijo Clotario II, que contaba 13 años de edad, fue nombrado rey de Neustria. Brunegilda intentó derrocar a Clotario II y asumir el poder de todos los reinos francos, pero no recibió suficiente apoyo y el intento fracasó.

En 599 por instigación de la nobleza de Austrasia, su nieto Teodeberto II, de 13 años de edad, asumió el trono y apartó a su abuela del poder, expulsándola de la corte de Austrasia. Brunegilda se refugió en la corte de Borgoña, en la ciudad de Orleans, donde fue bien recibida por su otro nieto, Teoderico II.

Las relaciones con la Iglesia [editar]

El rey de Austrasia y su madre Brunegilda establecieron buenas relaciones con el papa Gregorio I Magno, elegido en 590.

Existen tres cartas del pontífice enviadas a Brunegilda. En la primera, el pontífice comienza alabándola por ser una madre y reina ejemplar, y le solicita su patrocinio para el presbítero Candidus. En la tercera epístola, el papa le solicita su patrocinio para San Agustín de Canterbury, en su camino a evangelizar al pueblo de los anglos.

El obispo de Autun, San Desiderio, elegido en 596, criticaba con dureza las costumbres de la corte de Teoderico II, y de igual manera lo hizo con Brunegilda. La reina escribió al papa Gregorio I quejándose de la actitud de San Desiderio hacia su familia.

El obispo fue suspendido, pero continuó el conflicto entre el obispo, los soberanos y la nobleza de Borgoña. Años después, durante un sermón, San Desiderio criticó públicamente a Teoderico II y a Brunegilda, lo que resultó en su asesinato en 608, cometido por incondicionales de Teoderico II.

El monje irlandés San Columbano de Lexehuil se había establecido en 590 en el reino de Borgoña y con la aprobación del rey Gontran fundó varios conventos. Su regla era muy estricta y se encontraba en conflicto con los obispos y nobles francos.

Llegado el momento, se opuso a que el rey Teoderico II viviera en concubinato y lo incitó a buscar una esposa. La elegida fue Ermenberta o Ermenberga, hija del rey visigodo Witerico (o Viterico), pero la princesa fue rechazada por Brunegilda, repudiada finalmente por el rey y devuelta a Hispania sin su dote.

San Columbano decidió en una ocasión visitar la corte de Teoderico II en Autun. Brunegilda lo recibió con respeto y le solicitó una bendición para sus bisnietos que la acompañaban, hijos de Teoderico II.

El religioso se negó a hacerlo, aduciendo el origen ilegítimo de los niños y profetizó que nunca reinarían. La reina, ofendida, logró su expulsión del reino de Borgoña en 610.

Los últimos años [editar]

Brunegilda, cumplidos ya los 60 años de edad, continuaba dirigiendo las luchas por el poder entre los reinos francos. Las relaciones entre Teoderico II y Teodeberto II eran muy inestables, pero los hermanos se unían ocasionalmente para combatir a otros.

En dos batallas, una en Dormelles en 600 y otra en Étampes en 604, lograron la victoria sobre Clotario II de Neustria. En esta última batalla, librada el 25 de diciembre de 604, Teoderico II estuvo cercano a capturar y derrotar definitivamente a Clotario II, pero la nobleza de Austrasia lo forzó a firmar un tratado de paz a cambio de territorios.

Las relaciones entre los hermanos se fueron deteriorando cada vez más. Teodeberto II estaba influenciado por la nobleza de Austrasia y Teoderico II se guiaba más por el consejo de Brunegilda que por el de los nobles de Borgoña. La manzana de la discordia fue una disputa por territorios.

Teoderico II de Borgoña y su abuela Brunegilda tenían en 612 una posición de poder, con grandes territorios conquistados, y resolvieron atacar a Teodeberto II. Este rey perdió la guerra rápidamente durante ese mismo año.

Fue tonsurado —supuestamente por órdenes de Brunegilda— lo cual según las costumbres de la época lo inhabilitaba para reasumir el trono al menos hasta que le volviera a crecer el pelo, y encerrado en un monasterio junto a su hijo, donde murieron el mismo año. Se atribuyeron estas muertes a Brunegilda quien las habría ordenado para convertir a su nieto preferido Teoderico II en indiscutido rey de Austrasía, aunque las órdenes bien pudieron partir directamente del propio Teoderico II.

Es importante señalar que después de la muerte de Gregorio de Tours —ocurrida en el año 594— los cronistas que escribieron sobre Brunegilda ni siquiera fueron contemporáneos de ella —a diferencia del gran historiador de los Francos— y redactaron sus crónicas muchos años después de ocurridos los hechos. Se presume que por razones políticas, lo hicieron desde una perspectiva poco objetiva e intencionadamente desfavorable a Brunegilda pero, desgraciadamente, no hay demasiadas fuentes históricas alternativas que narren estos acontecimientos.

Teoderico II tomó el trono de Austrasia, pero a poco enfermó de disentería y murió a los 26 años de edad en 613, justo cuando se preparaba para atacar a Clotario II.

Brunegilda, ya de 70 años, reclamó entonces la corona para su bisnieto Sigeberto II y la regencia para ella, pero la nobleza de Austrasia dirigida por Pipino de Landen y el obispo de Metz, San Arnulfo, la rechazó y acordó una alianza con Clotario II de Neustria quien, a invitación de ambos, invadió militarmente el reino de Austrasia. También fue traicionada por Warnachaire, mayordomo de palacio de Borgoña, quien al mando de los ejércitos de ese reino, en vez de combatir a Clotario II, pactó con él —luego sería nombrado mayordomo de palacio de por vida por Clotario II.

Brunegilda, al verse sin apoyo militar, buscó la ayuda de las tribus germánicas que vivían a orillas del Rin, pero en su huida fue descubierta y apresada en Orbe, Jura por Herbon, un terrateniente que en teoría le debía fidelidad pero que la entregó a Clotario II. Fue sometida a juicio en Renève, donde se la responsabilizó de la muerte de muchas personas importantes; varias de esas muertes, en realidad, habían sido asesinatos ordenados por Fredegunda, la madre de Clotario II, y dos por Clotario II mismo.

Según las crónicas, la anciana reina fue seguidamente sometida a tormentos de los que no se muere durante tres días; luego fue exhibida sobre un camello para la mofa del ejército de Clotario II y, finalmente, atada a la cola de un caballo que la arrastró hasta morir. Otras fuentes indican que fue desmembrada entre cuatro caballos, lo cual podría ser más probable dado que era una muerte más atroz y visto el odio de Clotario II hacia Brunegilda.

La reina Brunegilda murió el 13 de octubre de 613. Sus restos fueron incinerados y sus cenizas depositadas en un sarcófago en la abadía de San Martín en Autun, fundada por ella en 602. Hoy reposan en el Museo Rolin en Aviñón.

La derrota y el suplicio de Brunegilda, más que el triunfo de Clotario II, representaron la victoria de la aristocracia terrateniente de Austrasia y de Borgoña, con la cual Clotario II —que nunca hubiera podido ganar con sus menguadas fuerzas de Neustria— tuvo que pactar para que traicionaran a la reina. En razón de estos pactos, la monarquía meroving

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son

Clodesinde
daughter

N.N. d'Austrasie
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Gosvinta
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Atanagildo I, rey de los visigodos
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Stephan
brother

Ofilón, II
brother

Gosvinta
sister

Ofilon Prince of the Visigoths
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Linea Genetica N°1 FAMILIA |•••► BRUNEHILDE
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1.- 0534 BRUNEHILDE DER WISIGOTHEN |•••► Pais:España
PADRE: Atanagildo I, Rey De Los Visigodos
MADRE: Gosvinta


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2.- 0525 ATANAGILDO I, REY DE LOS VISIGODOS |•••► Pais:España
PADRE: Amalarico I Rey De Los Visigodos
MADRE: Clotilda


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3.- 0502 AMALARICO I REY DE LOS VISIGODOS |•••► Pais:España
PADRE: Alarico Ii Rey De Los Visigodos
MADRE: Theodogotho


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4.- 0458 ALARICO II REY DE LOS VISIGODOS |•••► Pais:España
PADRE: Eurico I Rey De Los Visigodos
MADRE: Ragnahild


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5.- 0435 EURICO I REY DE LOS VISIGODOS |•••► Pais:España
PADRE: Teodorico I, Rey de los Visigodos
MADRE:


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6.- 0391 TEODORICO I, REY DE LOS VISIGODOS |•••► Pais:Italia
PADRE: Alarico I
MADRE:


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Atanagildo I, Rey De Los Visigodos ♛ Ref: AC-606 |•••► #España #Genealogía #Genealogy

Padre: Amalarico I Rey De Los Visigodos
Madre: Clotilda


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31 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
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(Linea Paterna)
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Atanagildo I, rey de los visigodos is your 31st great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father → Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar
his mother → María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas
her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar
her mother → Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García
her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva
his father → Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero
his father → Manuel Llamosas y Requecens
his father → Isabel de Requesens
his mother → Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda
her father → Juan de Zúñiga Avellaneda y Velasco
his father → Pedro de Zúñiga y Avellaneda, II conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father → Diego López de Zúñiga y Guzmán, I conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father → Isabel Elvira de Guzmán y Ayala, III Señora de Gibraleón
his mother → Elvira López de Ayala Guzmán
her mother → Leonor Suárez de Toledo y Guzmán
her mother → D. Pero Suárez de Toledo, señor de Bolaños
her father → Teresa Vázquez de Acuña, Señora de Villaverde
his mother → Vasco Martins da Cunha, "o Seco", 5º senhor de Tábua
her father → Joana Rodrigues de Nomães
his mother → Rodrigo Martins de Nomães, Señor de Reviñade y Silva-Escura
her father → Rodrigo Romães Conde de Monterroso
his father → Remón II de Monterroso, III conde de Monterroso
his father → Rodrigo Romaes, II conde de Monterroso y de Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father → Remón Romaes, Conde de Monterroso y Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father → Fruela I el Cruel, rey de Asturias
his father → Ermessenda, reina consorte de Asturias
his mother → Pelayo, rey de Asturias
her father → Liubigotona
his mother → Suintila, rey de los visigodos
her father → Clodesinde
his mother → Brunichild
her mother → Atanagildo I, rey de los visigodos
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Atanagildus German: Athanagild, König der Westgoten, King of the Visigoths MP
German: Athanagild German: Athanagild, König der Westgoten, König der Westgoten, Spanish: Ofilón German: Athanagild, König der Westgoten, King of the Visigoths
Gender: Male
Birth: between circa 520 and circa 525
Toledo, Castilla-La Mancha, Spania
Death: 568 (38-52)
Toledo, Toledo, Castile-La Mancha, Spain
Immediate Family:
Son of Amalarico I, rey de los Visigodos and Clotilda
Husband of Gosvinta
Father of Brunichild; Stephan; Ofilón, II; Gosvinta; Ofilon Prince of the Visigoths and 2 others
Added by: Pablo Romero (Curador) on June 5, 2009
Managed by: Victar and 16 others
Curated by: Victar
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Esteban Prince of the Visigoths
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Galswintha Queen of Solssons
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Teodorico I, Rey de los Visigodos ♛ Ref: JN-604 |•••► #Italia #Genealogía #Genealogy



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35 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
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(Linea Paterna)
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Theodoric I, King of the Visigoths is your 35th great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father → Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar
his mother → María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas
her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar
her mother → Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García
her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva
his father → Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero
his father → Manuel Llamosas y Requecens
his father → Isabel de Requesens
his mother → Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda
her father → Juan de Zúñiga Avellaneda y Velasco
his father → Pedro de Zúñiga y Avellaneda, II conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father → Diego López de Zúñiga y Guzmán, I conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father → Isabel Elvira de Guzmán y Ayala, III Señora de Gibraleón
his mother → Elvira López de Ayala Guzmán
her mother → Leonor Suárez de Toledo y Guzmán
her mother → D. Pero Suárez de Toledo, señor de Bolaños
her father → Teresa Vázquez de Acuña, Señora de Villaverde
his mother → Vasco Martins da Cunha, "o Seco", 5º senhor de Tábua
her father → Joana Rodrigues de Nomães
his mother → Rodrigo Martins de Nomães, Señor de Reviñade y Silva-Escura
her father → Rodrigo Romães Conde de Monterroso
his father → Remón II de Monterroso, III conde de Monterroso
his father → Rodrigo Romaes, II conde de Monterroso y de Santa Marta de Ortigueira
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her father → Clodesinde
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her mother → Atanagildo I, rey de los visigodos
her father → Amalarico I, rey de los Visigodos
his father → Alarico II, rey de los Visigodos
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Teodorico I of the Visigoths, King of the Visigoths MP
Spanish: Teodorico de los Visigodos, rey de los Visigodos
Gender: Male
Birth: circa 390
Dacia (south of the Danube River), Roman Empire
Death: June 20, 451 (56-65)
Battle of the Catalaunian Plains, (Present Châlons-en-Champagne), (Present département de la Marne), (Present Champagne-Ardenne), Gaul (Present France) (Battlefield near Troyes, France)
Place of Burial: (Present Pouan-les-Vallées), (Present département de l'Aube), (Present Champagne-Ardenne), Gaul (Present France)
Immediate Family:
Husband of N.N. and Unknown name wife of the Visigoths
Father of Eurico I, rey de los Visigodos; Himneriþ; Rikimer; Frideric; N.N. and 3 others
Added by: Kelsey Buckles on September 12, 2007
Managed by: Daniel Dupree Walton and 74 others
Curated by: Victar
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Ben M. Angel summary:

FMG supports the proposition that Alaric was his father-in-law, rather than father. Seeing nothing else that supports his direct descent, I'd have to go with their research.

As a result, these are his relationships:

Parents: Unknown

Siblings: Unknown

Spouse: Unknown daughter of Alaric I, King of the Visigoths (395-410)

All children presumed to be from spouse (though likely some were from concubines).

1. Unknown daughter (d. after 442), married to (in 429) and repudiated by (in 442) Huneric I, King of the Vandals

2. Thorismund, King of the Visigoths (451-453)

3. Theoderic II, King of the Visigoths (453-466)

4. Frideric (Friderico), Visigoth military leader

5. Euric I, King of the Visigoths (b. after 435, 466-484)

6. Retemiris (Ricimer), Visigoth military leader

7. Himnerith, Visigoth military leader

8. Unknown daughter, m. 449 in Toulouse Richgar/Requiario, King of the Suevi (d. 456)

Other children may exist, but they are unidentified.

Basic information and justification:

Born: Unknown. We don't even know who his parents are (barring additional proof, Alaric is his father in law).

Death: 20 June 451, Chalons (Battle of the Catalaunian Plains) was either trampled to death after falling from his horse during a charge, or pierced with a spear (likely the former), from the English Wikipedia article.

Buried: Pouan (though there is some skepticism about the assertion that the "Treasures of Pouan" were associated with his remains).

Wedding: Unknown date and location.

Occupation: King of the Visigoths (418-451)

Alternate names: Theodorid, Teodorico. Note: He has been considered kin with the Balti, but he is actually an inlaw. It would be valid to call his children with his wife as part of the Balti Dynasty.

From the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page on Toulouse (birth family not covered):

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/TOULOUSE.htm#_Toc225040394

THEODERIC I 418-451, THORISMUND 451-453, THEODERIC II 453-466

THEODERIC [Theoderid], son of --- (-killed in battle near Troyes summer 451).

According to Grote[53], King Theoderic I was the son of King Walia but Wolfram says that nothing is known about the earlier life of Theoderic[54].

He was elected to succeed in 418 as THEODERIC I King of the Visigoths. Iordanes names "Theoderidum" as successor of "Vallia rex Gothorum" but does not specify any relationship between the two[55].

He completed the transfer of Visigothic activity from Spain to France based on Toulouse[56]. In 422, the Visigoths marched against the Vandals in Spain but deserted their Roman allies who suffered a serious defeat[57].

The Visigoths became more aggressive in their raids against Roman towns in Gaul, besieging Arles several times between 425 and 430, and Narbonne in 437. The Romans counter-attacked Toulouse in 439, although their leader Litorius was killed[58].

The Visigoths fought for the Romans against the Suevi in Spain in 446, but made an alliance with the latter in 449, confirmed by the marriage of Theoderic’s daughter to the Suevi king[59]. King Theoderic marched with his two eldest sons into Champagne in summer 451 against Attila the Hun.

He was killed in the battle of the Catalaunian fields in which the combined Roman/Visigothic forces defeated the Huns[60]. Iordanes records that he was killed "in campis statim Catalaunicisis"[61]. Gregory of Tours records that Theoderic King of the Goths was killed in battle against Attila in support of his allies the Franks[62]. The Chronica Regum Visigotthorum records that “Theuderedus” reigned for 33 years[63]. [64]

m --- of the Visigoths, daughter of ALARIC I King of the Visigoths & his wife ---.

King Theoderic I had more than nine children, although it is not known whether these were by his wife or by concubines:

1. daughter (-after 442).

She was sent back to her father at the time of the 442 revolt with her nose and ears mutilated[65].

m ([429] or after[66], repudiated 442) as his first wife, HUNERIC, son of GENSERIC King of the Vandals.

2. THORISMUND (-murdered 453).

Iordanes names (in order) "Friderichum et Eurichum, Retemerim et Himnerith" as four of the sons of "Theoderido", specifying that their father took his two older sons "Thorismud et Theodericum maiores natu" when he fought at the battle of the Catalaunian Fields, dated to 451[67]. Herimannus names "Torismod filius Theodorus rex Gothorum" when recording that he succeeded his father[68].

He was elected to succeed his father in 451 as THORISMUND King of the Visigoths. Iordanes records that he also fought "in campis statim Catalaunicisis" and succeeded after the death of his father in the same battle[69].

He made war on the Alans at Orléans and marched again on Arles[70].

The Chronicon of Bishop Idatius records that “Thorismo Rex Gothorum” was killed by “Theuderico et Frederico fratribus” in 453[71]. The Chronica Regum Visigotthorum records that “Thurismodus” reigned for three years[72].

3. THEODERIC (-murdered 466). (Son of King Theodoric 418-451)

Iordanes names (in order) "Friderichum et Eurichum, Retemerim et Himnerith" as four of the sons of "Theoderido", specifying that their father took his two older sons "Thorismud et Theodericum maiores natu" when he fought at the battle of the Catalaunian Fields, dated to 451[73].

Herimannus names "Theodericus frater Torismodo regi Gothorum" when recording that he succeeded his brother[74]. He was elected to succeed after murdering his brother in 453 as THEODERIC II King of the Visigoths. The Chronicon of Bishop Idatius records that “Thorismo Rex Gothorum” was killed by “Theuderico et Frederico fratribus” in 453 and that Theoderic succeeded to the throne[75]. Iordanes records that "Thederidus germanus eius" succeeded after the death of Thorismund but does not specify that he was responsible for his brother's death[76]. He invaded Spain in 454 in support of Emperor Avitus and inflicted a resounding defeat on the Suevi in 456[77]. The Chronicon Albeldense records that “Teudericus” entered Spain, defeated “Ricciarium Suevorum regem” in battle “Asturica apud Urbicum fluvium”, and pursued him into “Portucale” where he killed Requiario and captured “Bracarum”[78]. He returned to Toulouse in Mar 457 but left a Visigoth contingent which advanced through Betica, eventually taking partial control of Seville[79]. The Chronicon Albeldense records that “Teudericus” returned to Gaul after leaving Portugal and was killed “ab Eurico…fratre”[80]. Iordanes records that his brother Euric was suspected of involvement in the death of Theoderic[81]. The Chronica Regum Visigotthorum records that “Theudoricus” reigned for 7, otherwise 13, years[82].

4. FRIDERIC [Federico].

Iordanes names (in order) "Friderichum et Eurichum, Retemerim et Himnerith" as four of the sons of "Theoderido", specifying that their father took his two older sons "Thorismud et Theodericum maiores natu" when he fought at the battle of the Catalaunian Fields, dated to 451[83].

The Chronicon of Bishop Idatius records that “Thorismo Rex Gothorum” was killed by “Theuderico et Frederico fratribus” in 453[84]. He shared power jointly with his brother King Theoderic II[85]. He led a military incursion into Spain in 454[86].

5. EURIC ([after 435]-Arles [Dec] 484).

Iordanes names (in order) "Friderichum et Eurichum, Retemerim et Himnerith" as four of the sons of "Theoderido", specifying that their father took his two older sons "Thorismud et Theodericum maiores natu" when he fought at the battle of the Catalaunian Fields, dated to 451[87].

He was elected to succeed in 466 as EURIC King of the Visigoths after murdering his brother King Theoderic II.

6. RETEMERIS [Ricimer].

Iordanes names (in order) "Friderichum et Eurichum, Retemerim et Himnerith" as four of the sons of "Theoderido", specifying that their father took his two older sons "Thorismud et Theodericum maiores natu" when he fought at the battle of the Catalaunian Fields, dated to 451[88].

7. HIMNERITH.

Iordanes names (in order) "Friderichum et Eurichum, Retemerim et Himnerith" as four of the sons of "Theoderido", specifying that their father took his two older sons "Thorismud et Theodericum maiores natu" when he fought at the battle of the Catalaunian Fields, dated to 451[89].

8. daughter.

Isidor's Historia Gothorum, Wandalorum, Sueborum records that "Recciarius Reccilani filius" married "Theuderedi regis Gothorum filia"[90]. The Chronicon of Bishop Idatius records that “Rechiarius” married “Theodoris Regis filia” in 449[91].

Her marriage was arranged to confirm her father's alliance with the Suevi in Spain.

m (Toulouse 449[92]) REQUIARIO King of the Suevi in Spain, son of REQUILA King of the Suevi (-456).

9. other daughters[93].

References:

[53] Grote, H. (1877) Stammtafeln (reprint Leipzig, 1984), p. 17.

[54] Wolfram, H. (1998) History Of The Goths (Berkeley, California), pp. 174-5.

[55] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, p. 103.

[56] García-Guijarro Ramos, L. 'Las invasions bárbaras en Hispania y la creación del Reino Visigodo', Álvarez Palenzuela, V. Á. (coord.) (2002) Historia de España de la Edad Media (Barcelona), p. 11.

[57] Wolfram (1998), p. 175.

[58] Wolfram (1998), pp. 175-6.

[59] Wolfram (1998), p. 177.

[60] Wolfram (1998), p. 178.

[61] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, p. 113.

[62] Gregory of Tours, II.7, p. 118.

[63] Chronica Regum Visigotthorum, España Sagrada Tomo II, p. 172.

[64] Wolfram (1998), p. 174.

[65] Wolfram (1998), p. 177.

[66] Wolfram (1998), p. 177.

[67] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, XXXVI, p. 107.

[68] Herimanni Augiensis Chronicon 449, MHG SS V, p. 83.

[69] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, p. 113.

[70] Wolfram (1998), p. 178.

[71] Idatii Episcopi Chronicon, España Sagrada III, p. 368.

[72] Chronica Regum Visigotthorum, España Sagrada Tomo II, p. 172.

[73] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, XXXVI, p. 107.

[74] Herimanni Augiensis Chronicon 452, MHG SS V, p. 83.

[75] Idatii Episcopi Chronicon, España Sagrada III, p. 368.

[76] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, p. 113.

[77] Wolfram (1998), p. 179.

[78] Chronicon Albeldense 21, Patrologia Latina Vol. 129, col. 1134A.

[79] García-Guijarro (2002), p. 15.

[80] Chronicon Albeldense 21, Patrologia Latina Vol. 129, col. 1134A.

[81] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, p. 118.

[82] Chronica Regum Visigotthorum, España Sagrada Tomo II, p. 172.

[83] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, XXXVI, p. 107.

[84] Idatii Episcopi Chronicon, España Sagrada III, p. 368.

[85] Wolfram (1998), p. 202.

[86] Wolfram (1998), p. 178.

[87] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, XXXVI, p. 107.

[88] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, XXXVI, p. 107.

[89] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, XXXVI, p. 107.

[90] Isidori Historia Gothorum, Wandalorum, Sueborum 486, MGH Auct. ant. XI, p. 301.

[91] Idatii Episcopi Chronicon, España Sagrada III, p. 365.

[92] Wolfram (1998), p. 177.

[93] King Theoderic I had a "wealth of daughters" according to Wolfram (1998), p. 177.

From the English Wikipedia page on Theodoric I:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodoric_I

Theodoric I, sometimes called Theodorid and in Spanish, Portuguese and Italian Teodorico, was the King of the Visigoths from 418 to 451. He was either the illegitimate son of Alaric[1] or his son-in-law[2]

Early career

In 418 he succeeded King Wallia. The Romans had ordered King Wallia to move his people from the Iberia to Gaul. As king, Theodoric completed the settlements of the Visigoths in Gallia Aquitania II, Novempopulana and Gallia Narbonensis, and then used the declining power of the Roman Empire to extend his territory to the south.

After the death of Emperor Honorius and the usurpation of Joannes in 423 internal power struggles broke out in the Roman Empire. Theodoric used this situation and tried to capture the important road junction Arelate (Arles), but the Magister militum Aëtius, who was assisted by the Huns, was able to save the city.[3]

The Visigoths concluded a treaty and were given Gallic noblemen as hostages. The later Emperor Avitus visited Theodoric, lived at his court and taught his sons.[4]

Expansion to the Mediterranean

Because the Romans had to fight against the Franks, who plundered Cologne and Trier in 435, and because of other events Theodoric saw the chance to conquer Narbo Martius (in 436) to obtain access to the Mediterranean Sea and the roads to the Pyrenees. But Litorius, with the aid of the Huns, could prevent the capture of the city and drove the Visigoths back to their capital Tolosa.[5] The peace offer of Theodoric was refused, but the king won the decisive battle at Tolosa, and Litorius soon died in Gothic imprisonment from the injuries, which he had received in this battle.[6] Avitus went – according to the orders of Aëtius – to Tolosa and offered a peace treaty which Theodoric accepted.[7] Perhaps the Romans recognized at that time the sovereignty of the Visigoth state.

Enmity with Vandals

A daughter of Theodoric had been married to Huneric, a son of the Vandal ruler Geiseric (in 429?), but Huneric later had ambitions to wed Eudocia, a daughter of the Emperor Valentinian III. He therefore accused the daughter of Theodoric of planning to kill him, and in 444 had her mutilated - her ears and nose cut off[8] - and sent back to her father.[9] This action caused an enmity between the Visigoths and the Vandals.

An enemy of Aëtius, the former Magister militum Sebastianus, came in 444 to Tolosa.[10] So there could have emerged strained relations with Aëtius, but Theodoric soon sent his unwelcome guest away who captured Barcelona and was later (in 450) executed at the orders of Geiseric.

Theodoric was also an enemy of the Suevic king Rechila in Iberia, because Visigoth troops assisted the imperial commander Vitus at his campaign against the Suevi in 446.[11] But the ability of this people to conduct a strong defence and the better relations between Geiseric and the Roman Empire led Theodoric to change his foreign policy. He therefore married in February 449 one of his daughters to the new Suevic king Rechiar, who visited his father-in-law at Tolosa in July 449.[12] At the return Rechiar devastated – according to the author Isidore of Seville with the assistance of Visigoth troops[13] – the surrounding area of the city Caesaraugusta and could take Ilerda with a cunning.

Some recent scientists doubt that Theodoric took legislative measures, as it was assumed in earlier times.[14]

Alliance against the Huns

When Attila the Hun advanced with his large army to Western Europe and invaded finally Gaul Avitus arranged an alliance between Theodoric and his long-standing enemy Aëtius against the Huns.[15] Probably Theodoric accepted this coalition because he recognized the danger of the Huns to his own realm. With his whole army and his sons Thorismund and Theodoric he joined Aëtius.

The Visigoth and Roman troops then saved the civitas Aurelianorum and forced Attila to withdraw (June 451).[16]

Battle of Châlons

Then Aëtius and Theodoric followed the Huns and fought against them at the Battle of Châlons near Troyes in about September 451. Most Visigoths fought at the right wing under the command of Theodoric but a smaller force fought at the left under the command of Thorismund.[17]

Theodoric's forces contributed decisively to the victory of the Romans, but he himself was killed during the battle. Jordanes records two different accounts of his death: one was that Theodoric was thrown from his horse and trampled to death; the second was that Theodoric was slain by the spear of the Ostrogoth Andag, who was the father of Jordanes's patron Gunthigis.

The body of Theodoric was only found at the next day. According to Gothic tradition he was mourned and buried by his warriors on the battlefield.[18] Immediately Thorismund was elected as successor of his father. Other sons of Theodoric were Theodoric II, Frederic, Euric, Retimer and Himnerith.[19]

Notes

1. ^ Gibbon, Edward. The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.

http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/g/gibbon/edward/g43d/chapter35.html

2. ^ (see G. Kampers, 2005, p. 419)

3. ^ Prosper, Epitoma chronicon 1290, in: MGH Auctores antiquissimi (AA) 9, p. 471; Chronica Gallica of 452, 102, in: MGH AA 9, p. 658; Sidonius Apollinaris, letters 7. 12. 3

4. ^ Sidonius Apollinaris, carmen 7. 215sqq.; 7. 495sqq.

http://home.hccnet.nl/j.a.van.waarden/index.html

5. ^ Prosper, Epitoma chronicon 1324 and 1326, in: MGH AA 9, p. 475; Hydatius, chronicle 107 und 110, in: MGH AA 11, p. 22-23; Merobaudes, panegyric, fragment II A 23, in: Vollmer, MGH AA 14, p. 9; Sidonius Apollinaris, carmen 7. 246sqq.; 7. 475sqq.

6. ^ Prosper, Epitoma chronicon 1335, in: MGH AA 9, p. 476; Hydatius, chronicle 116, in: MGH AA 11, p. 23; Salvian, de gubernatione dei 7. 9. 39sqq.

7. ^ Prosper, Epitoma chronicon 1338, in: MGH AA 9, p. 477; Hydatius, chronicle 117, in: MGH AA 11, p. 23; Sidonius Apollinaris, carmen 7. 295sqq.

8. ^ "The Fall of the West" by Adrian Goldsworthy, W&N (2009), ISBN-13:978-0297845638 (page 330)

9. ^ Jordanes, Getica 36, 184

http://www.northvegr.org/histories%20and%20chronicles/the%20origins%20and%20deeds%20of%20the%20goths/index.html

10. ^ Hydatius, chronicle 129, in: MGH AA 11, p. 24 (dated into the year 444); Prosper, Epitoma chronicon 1342, in: MGH AA 9, p. 478 (wrongly dated into the year 440)

11. ^ Hydatius, chronicle 134, in: MGH AA 11, p. 24

12. ^ Hydatius, chronicle 140 and 142, in: MGH AA 11, p. 25; Jordanes, Getica 44. 229 and 231

13. ^ Isidore, Historia Gothorum, Vandalorum et Suevorum 87, in: MGH AA 11, p. 301

http://la.wikisource.org/wiki/Historia_de_regibus_Gothorum,_Vandalorum_et_Suevorum

14. ^ G. Kampers, RGA, vol. 30, p. 420

15. ^ Sidonius Apollinaris, carmen 7. 332sqq.; 7. 336sqq.; 7. 352sqq.; Prosper, Epitoma chronicon 1364, in: MGH AA 9, p. 481; compare Jordanes, Getica 36. 187sqq.

16. ^ Sidonius Apollinaris, carmen 7, 346sqq.; letters 7. 12. 3; 8. 15. 1; Jordanes, Getica 37. 195; Gregory of Tours, Historia Francorum 2. 7; Vita S. Aniani 7 und 10, in: MGH, Scriptores rerum Merovingicarum 3. 112-113; 3. 115-116

17. ^ Jordanes, Getica 38. 197 and 201

18. ^ Jordanes, Getica 40. 209 and 41. 214; Hydatius, chronicle 150, in: MGH AA 11, p. 26

19. ^ Jordanes, Getica 36. 190

References

G. Kampers: Theoderid. In: Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde (RGA). vol. 30 (2005), p. 419-421.

Wilhelm Enßlin: Theoderich I. In: Realencyclopädie der Classischen Altertumswissenschaft, vol. V A 2, col. 1735-1740.

http://de.wikisource.org/wiki/Paulys_Realencyclop%C3%A4die_der_classischen_Altertumswissenschaft

External links

Edward Gibbon, History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, chapter 35

http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/g/gibbon/edward/g43d/chapter35.html

---

King Theodoric I of the Visigoths

Balti dynasty

Died: 451

Regnal titles

King of the Visigoths 418–451

Preceded by Wallia

Succeeded by Thorismund

From the English Wikipedia page on the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains, where he died:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Ch%C3%A2lons

Battle of Châlons

Part of the Hunnic invasion of Gaul

Date: June 20, 451

Location: Somewhere in the northeastern part of present-day France

Result: Tactically inconclusive; withdrawal of the Huns; Strategic Roman/Visigothic victory

Belligerents:

Western Roman Empire (under Flavius Aetius), Franks (under Merovech), Visigoths (under Theodoric, killed in battle), Burgundians (under Gondioc), Alani (under Sangiban), Saxons, Armoricans, Sarmatians: 30,000 men.

Hunnic Empire (under Attila), Ostrogoths (under Valamir), Gepids (under Ardaric), Rugians (under Berik), Scirii, Thuringians, Scythians, Bastarnae, Taifals, Alamanni: 30,000 men.

Casualties and losses: unknown

---

The Battle of the Catalaunian Plains (or Fields), also called the Battle of Châlons (also spelled Chalons or Chalon), took place in 451 between a coalition led by the Roman general Flavius Aetius and the Visigothic king Theodoric I on one side and the Huns and their allies commanded by Attila on the other. It was one of the last major military operations of the Western Roman Empire and marks the apex of the career of Flavius Aetius. The battle resulted in a defeat for the Huns and considerably hindered their attempt to conquer western Europe.

Prelude

By 450 Roman control of Gaul had grown feeble, as had control over all of the provinces beyond Italy. Celtic Armorica was only nominally part of the empire. Germanic tribes prowling around Roman territory had been forcibly settled and served as foederati under their own leaders. Northern Gaul between the Rhine and Marne rivers (Gallia Belgica) had unofficially been abandoned to the Franks.

The Visigoths in Gallia Aquitania were growing restive. The Burgundians near the Alps were more submissive, but likewise awaiting openings for revolt. The only parts still securely in Roman control were the Mediterranean coastline, a band of varying width running from Aurelianum (present-day Orléans) upstream along the Loire and one downstream along the Rhône River

The historian Jordanes states that Attila was enticed by the Vandals' king Gaiseric to wage war on the Visigoths. At the same time, Gaiseric would attempt to sow strife between the Visigoths and the Western Roman Empire (Getica 36.184–6).[1]

Other contemporary writers offer different motivations: Honoria, a troublesome sister of Emperor Valentinian III, had been married off to the loyal senator Herculanus a few years before. This kept her in respectable confinement. In 450, she sent a message to the Hunnic king asking for Attila's help in escaping her confinement. She offered her hand in marriage, and half of the empire as dowry. He demanded Honoria to be delivered along with the dowry. Valentinian rejected these demands, and Attila used it as an excuse to launch a destructive campaign through Gaul.[2]

Attila crossed the Rhine early in 451 with his followers and a large number of allies, sacking Divodurum (Metz) on April 7. Other cities attacked can be determined by the hagiographic vitae written to commemorate their bishops: Nicasius was slaughtered before the altar of his church in Rheims; Servatus is alleged to have saved Tongeren with his prayers, as Genevieve is to have saved Paris.[3] Lupus, bishop of Troyes, is also credited with saving his city by meeting Attila in person.[4]

Attila's army had reached Aurelianum (Orléans) by June. This fortified city guarded an important crossing over the Loire. According to Jordanes, the Alan king Sangiban, whose foederati realm included Aurelianum, had promised to open the city gates;[5] this siege is confirmed by the account of the Vita S. Anianus and in the later account of Gregory of Tours,[6] although Sangiban's name does not appear in their accounts.

However, the inhabitants of Aurelianum shut their gates against the advancing invaders. Attila began to besiege the city, while he waited for Sangiban to deliver on his promise.

Battle

Upon learning of the invasion, the Magister militum Flavius Aetius moved quickly from Italy into Gaul. According to Sidonius Apollinaris, he was leading forth a force consisting of few and sparse auxiliaries without one regular soldier.[7]

He immediately attempted to convince Theodoric I to join him. The Visigothic king learned how few troops Aëtius had with him and decided it was wiser to wait to oppose the Huns in his own lands. Aetius turned then to the powerful local magnate Avitus for help, who was not only able to convince Theodoric to join with the Romans, but also a number of other wavering "barbarians" resident in Gaul.[8]

The combined armies then marched for Aurelianum (Orléans), reaching that city about June 14.

According to the author of the Vita S. Anianus, they had reached the besieged Aurelianum literally at the last possible minute. Attila's men had made a breach in the city's walls and had positioned a party within the city. At this very moment, news of an advancing hostile army reached the Huns. They were virtually in control of the city, but to keep it meant to be besieged in it.

Hence they broke camp and proceeded back homewards, doubtless looking for an advantageous spot to make a stand. Theodoric and Aetius followed in close pursuit.

The two forces at last met at the Catalaunian Fields on June 20, a date first proposed by J.B. Bury[9] and since accepted by many, although some sources claim September 20.

The night before the main battle, one of the Frankish forces on the Roman side encountered a band of the Gepids loyal to Attila. Jordanes' recorded number of 15,000 dead on either side for this skirmish[10] is not verifiable.

In accordance to Hunnic customs, Attila had his diviners examine the entrails of a sacrifice the morning before battle. They foretold disaster would befall the Huns and one of the enemy leaders would be killed. At the risk of his own life and hoping for Aetius to die, Attila at last gave the orders for combat, but delayed until the ninth hour so the impending sunset would help his troops to flee the battlefield in case of defeat.[11]

According to Jordanes, the Catalaunian plain rose on one side by a sharp slope to a ridge. This geographical feature dominated the battlefield and became the center of the battle. The Huns first seized the right side of the ridge, while the Romans seized the left, with the crest unoccupied between them. (Jordanes explains that the Visigoths held the right side, the Romans the left, with Sangiban of uncertain loyalty and his Alans surrounded in the middle.)

When the Hunnic forces attempted to seize the decisive central position, they were foiled by the Roman alliance. Their troops had arrived first and repulsed the Hunnic advance. The Hunnic warriors fled in disorder back into their own forces, thereby disordering the rest of Attila's army.[12]

Attila attempted to rally his forces, struggling to hold his position. Meanwhile Theodoric, while leading his own men after the disordered enemy, was killed in the assault without his men noticing. Jordanes states that Theodoric was thrown from his horse and trampled to death by his advancing men, but he also mentions another story that had Theodoric slain by the spear of the Ostrogoth Andag. Since Jordanes served as the notary of Andag's son Gunthigis, even if this latter story is not true, this version was certainly a proud family tradition.[13]

The Visigoths outstripped the speed of the Alans beside them and fell upon Attila's own Hunnic household unit. Attila was forced to seek refuge in his own camp, which he had fortified with wagons. The Romano-Gothic charge apparently swept past the Hunnic camp in pursuit; when night fell, Thorismund, son of king Theodoric, returning to friendly lines, mistakenly entered Attila's encampment. There he was wounded in the ensuing mêlée before his followers could rescue him.

Darkness also separated Aetius from his own men. As he feared that disaster had befallen them, he spent the rest of the night with his Gothic allies.[14]

On the following day, finding the battlefields "were piled high with bodies and the Huns did not venture forth", the Goths and Romans met to decide their next move. Knowing that Attila was low on provisions and "was hindered from approaching by a shower of arrows placed within the confines of the Roman camp", they started to besiege his camp. In this desperate situation, Attila remained unbowed and "heaped up a funeral pyre of horse saddles, so that if the enemy should attack him, he was determined to cast himself into the flames, that none might have the joy of wounding him and that the lord of so many races might not fall into the hands of his foes".[15]

While Attila was trapped in his camp, the Visigoths searched for their missing king and his son Thorismund. After a long search, they found Theodoric's body beneath a mound of corpses and bore him away with heroic songs in sight of the enemy.

Upon learning of his father's death, Thorismund wanted to assault Attila's camp, but Aetius dissuaded him. According to Jordanes, Aetius feared that if the Huns were completely destroyed, the Visigoths would break off their allegiance to the Roman Empire and become an even graver threat. So Aetius convinced Thorismund to quickly return home and secure the throne for himself, before his brothers could. Otherwise, civil war would ensue among the Visigoths.

Thorismund quickly returned to Tolosa (present-day Toulouse) and became king without any resistance. Gregory of Tours (Historia Francorum 2.7) claims Aëtius used the same stratagem to dismiss his Frankish allies, and collected the booty of the battlefield for himself.

On the Visigoths' withdrawal, Attila first believed it to be a feigned retreat to draw his battered forces out into the open for annihilation. So he remained within his defences for some time before he risked leaving his camp and returned home.[16]

]Forces

Both armies consisted of combatants from many peoples. Jordanes lists Aetius' allies as including (besides the Visigoths) both the Salic and Ripuarian Franks, Sarmatians, Armoricans, Liticians, Burgundians, Saxons, librones (whom he describes as "once Roman soldiers and now the flower of the allied forces"), and other Celtic or German tribes.[17]

Jordanes' list for Attila's allies includes the Gepids under their king Ardaric, as well as an Ostrogothic army led by the brothers Valamir, Theodemir (the father of the later Ostrogothic king Theodoric the Great) and Widimer, scions of the Amali.[18]

Sidonius offers a more extensive list of allies: Rugians, Gepids, Gelonians, Burgundians, Sciri, Bellonotians, Neurians, Bastarnae, Thuringians, Bructeri, and Franks living along the Neckar River[19] E.A. Thompson expresses his suspicions that some of these names are drawn from literary traditions rather than from the event itself.

The Bastarnae, Bructeri, Geloni and Neuri had disappeared hundreds of years before the time of the Huns, while the Bellonoti had never existed at all: presumably the learned poet was thinking of the Balloniti, a people invented by Valerius Flaccus nearly four centuries earlier.[20]

On the other hand, Thompson believes that the presence of Burgundians on the Hunnic side is credible, noting that a group is documented as remaining east of the Rhine; likewise, he believes that the other peoples Sidonius alone mentions—the Rugians, Scirans and Thuringians—were likely participants in this battle.

However, the number of participants for either side—or in total—is entirely speculative. Jordanes reports the number of dead from this battle as 165,000, excluding the casualties of the Franko-Gepid skirmish previous to the main battle. Hydatius, a historian who lived at the time of Attila's invasion, reports the number of 300,000 dead. No primary source offers an estimate for the number of participants.

The figures of both Jordanes and Hydatius are implausibly high. Thompson remarks in a footnote, "I doubt that Attila could have fed an army of even 30,000 men."[21]

As a reference, in the early 3rd century, the Roman Empire maintained 30 legions with just under 5,200 actual men each; if we follow the general assumption that the number of auxiliaries matched the number of legionaries, then add the Praetorian Guard as 5,000 strong, and six Urban Cohorts, we find that the Empire at its height fielded a grand total of 323,000 soldiers across its territories.[22]

A better sense of the size of the forces may be found in the study of the Notitia Dignitatum by A.H.M. Jones.[23] This document is a list of officials and military units that was last updated in the first decades of the 5th century. Notitia Dignitatum lists 58 various regular units, and 33 limitanei serving either in the Gallic provinces or on the frontiers nearby; the total of these units, based on Jones analysis, is 34,000 for the regular units and 11,500 for the limitanei, or just under 46,000 all told.

While the Roman forces in Gaul had become much smaller by this time, if we accept this number as the total of all of the forces fighting with Theodoric and Aetius, we should not be too far off. Assuming that the Hunnic forces were roughly the same size as the Romano-Gothic, the number involved in battle is just under 100,000 combatants in total. This excludes the inevitable servants and camp followers who usually escape mention.

Site of the Catalaunian Fields

The actual location of the Catalaunian Fields is not known with certainty: Historian Thomas Hodgkin located the site near Méry-sur-Seine,[24] but current consensus[citation needed] places the battlefield at Châlons-en-Champagne.

In 1842, a labourer uncovered a burial at Pouan-les-Vallées (Aube), a village on the south bank of the Aube River, that consisted of a skeleton with a number of jewels and gold ornaments and buried with two swords; by the nature of its grave goods this elite burial was of a princely Germanic warrior who lived in the 5th century.

The Treasure of Pouan is conserved in the Musée Saint-Loup (Musée d'Art d'Archéologie et de Sciences Naturelles), Troyes.

The archeologist who described this find, Achille Peigné-Delacourt (1797–1881), claimed that these were the remains of Theodoric, but 20th-century historians generally have expressed their scepticism over this identification.

Notes:

1. ^ The Getica (or "Gothic History"), our principal source for this battle, is the work of Jordanes, who acknowledges that his work is based on Cassiodorus' own Gothic History, written between 526 and 533. However, the philologist Theodor Mommsen argued that Jordanes' detailed description of the battle was copied from lost writings of the Greek historian Priscus. It is available in an English translation by Charles Christopher Mierow, The Gothic History of Jordanes (Cambridge: Speculum Historiale, 1966, a reprint of the 1915 second edition); all quotations of Jordanes are taken from this edition, which is in the public domain.

http://people.ucalgary.ca/~vandersp/Courses/texts/jordgeti.html

2. ^ A modern narrative based these sources can be found in E.A. Thompson, The Huns (Oxford: Blackwell, 1996), pp. 144–48. This is a posthumous revision by Peter Heather of Thompson's A History of Attila and the Huns, originally published in 1948.

3. ^ The vitae are summarized in Thomas Hodgkin, Italy and Her Invaders (New York: Russell & Russell, 1967 reprint of the original 1880–89 edition), volume II pp. 128ff.

4. ^ Catholic Online article on St. Lupus:

http://www.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=712

5. ^ Getica 36.194f;

6. ^ Historia Francorum 2.7.

7. ^ Sidonius Apollinaris, Carmina 7.329f.

8. ^ Sidonius Apollinaris, Carmina 7.332–356.

9. ^ Bury, History of the Later Roman Empire from the Death of Theodosius I to the Death of Justinian, 1923 (New York: Dover, 1958), p. 29 n.59.

http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/secondary/BURLAT/9*.html

10. ^ Getica 41.217

11. ^ Getica 37.196

12. ^ Getica 38.

13. ^ Getica 40.209.

14. ^ Getica 40.209–212.

15. ^ Getica 40.213.

16. ^ Getica 41.214–217.

17. ^ Getica 36.191.

18. ^ Getica 38.199.

19. ^ Carmina 7.321–325.

20. ^ E.A. Thompson, The Huns, p. 149.

21. ^ Thompson, The Huns, endnote 65, on page 300.

22. ^ This figure is based on a similar calculation made by Chester G. Starr in The Roman Empire 27 B.C. – 476 A.D. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1982), p. 88.

23. ^ A.H.M. Jones, The Later Roman Empire (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 1986 reprint of the 1964 original), pp. 1417–50.

24. ^ Hodgkin, Italy and Her Invaders, volume II, pp. 160–2.

http://www.archive.org/stream/italyandherinva08hodggoog#page/n8/mode/1up

Further reading

J.F.C. Fuller, "The Battle of Chalons", A Military History of the Western World: From he Earliest Times To The Battle of Lepanto, Da Capo Press, New York, vol. 1. pp. 282–301 ISBN 0-306-80304-6.

Man, John, Attila: The Barbarian King Who Challenged Rome New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 2006.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Battle of Chalons

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Battle_of_Chalons

External links

Sir Edward Creasy's chapter on the Battle of Chalons at Literaturemania.com (Non-functional link):

http://www.literaturemania.com/tfdbt10/page19.asp

History of the Later Roman Empire (1923) at LacusCurtius (Webcached):

http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/secondary/BURLAT/home.html

From the French Wikipedia page on the Catalaunes:

http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalaunes

Les Catalaunes (Catalauni en latin) sont un peuple gaulois dont le nom celte signifie « les meilleurs au combat ». Leur territoire se situait dans l’actuelle région de Châlons-en-Champagne (Marne)

On sait très peu de choses. Jules César, dans sa guerre des Gaules, ne les cite pas.

Ce peuple gaulois disposait d'un important oppidum à La Cheppe, au lieu-dit du Vieux Châlons, oppidum généralement appelé « le camp d'Attila », le « fléau de Dieu » l'ayant utilisé, selon la légende, comme camp retranché lors de la bataille des champs Catalauniques (20 juin 451).

Les historiens considèrent que la tribu des Catalaunes était tributaire des Rèmes, dont le centre politique était Durocortorum, l'actuelle ville de Reims, distante de 45 km de Châlons-en-Champagne, ville dont le nom dérive de Catalaunum, parfois appelée Duro Catalaunum, garnison romaine implantée le long de la voie Agrippa, sur une des îles de la Marne, vers 20 avant JC.

Châlons ou Chaalons (Châlons-sur-Marne devenue Châlons-en-Champagne en 1995) était une des stations Durocatalaunos source du voyage d'Antonin ( n° vers 361 ).Des tombes furent découvertes en 1891, en creusant les fondations des nouveaux bâtiments du collège Saint-Etienne , élevé sur l'emplacement du vieil Evéché. A 4 mêtres de profondeur, les ouvriers ont découvert des monuments avec les inscriptions suivantes :fur(ius ) Antonimus cir(cilor) n(umeri) Dal(matarum) vixit preuves du passage d'Antonin. (source abbé Puiseux).

In English:

The Catalaunes (Catalaunian in Latin) were a Gallic tribe whose name in Celtic means "best in combat". Their territory was in the present region of Chalons-en-Champagne (Departement de la Marne). We know very little about them. Julius Caesar, in his Gallic Wars, did not describe them.

The Gallic people had an important oppidum at La Cheppe, at a location called the Old Chalons Oppidum, or more generally "The Camp of Attila," the so-called "Scourge of God" who had used, according to legend, the place as an entrenched camp during the Battle of Chalons (20 June 451).

Historians believe that the tribe was dependent on Catalaunian Remi, whose political center was Durocortorum, present Rheims, 45 km away from Chalons-en-Champagne, a city whose name is attached to Catalaunum, sometimes called Duro Catalaunum. A Roman garrison was placed here along the Via Agrippa on an island in the Marne sometime around 20 BC.

Chalons or Chaalons (formerly Chalons-sur-Marne before 1995) was one of the Durocatalaunos stations involved with the Antonin journey (No. 361). Graves were discovered in 1891 while digging the foundation for new buildings at the College St-Etienne, built on the site of an old Bishopric. At 4 meters depth, workmen discovered monuments with the following inscriptions "fur(ius ) Antonimus cir(cilor) n(umeri) Dal(matarum) vixit preuves du passage d'Antonin". (Source: abbé Puiseux)

Sources

Histoire de Châlons-sur-Marne de Georges Clause et Jean-Pierre Ravaux, éditions Horvath, 1983.

d'après les sources de l'Abbé Puiseux

Voir aussi

Champs Catalauniques

http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teodorico_I

Teodorico I o Teodoredo I (¿? – 451) fue un rey de los visigodos. Era hijo ilegítimo de Alarico,[1] y en el año 418 sucedió a Walia, reinando hasta el 451. Con él comienza el linaje de Tolosa (Toulouse). Completó el asentamiento de los visigodos en Aquitania y expandió sus dominios a Hispania.

Biografía [editar]

Los romanos habían ordenado a Walia abandonar Hispania y trasladarse con su gente a Galia. Por lo tanto Teodorico, como su sucesor, completó los asentamientos visigóticos en Gallia Aquitania II, Novempopulania y Gallia Narbonensis. Pero los visigodos no tenían acceso al Mar Mediterráneo. Fue entonces que Teodorico aprovechó la decadencia del Imperio Romano para extender sus territorios hacia el sur. Tras la muerte del emperador Flavio Honorio y la usurpación de Joannes en 423, ocurrieron pugnas dentro del Imperio, y Teodorico intentó conquistar Arlés, pero se lo impidió el Magister militum Aecio, quien fue asistido por los hunos.[2] Entonces los visigodos acordaron un tratado y se les dio nobles galos como rehenes. Como hecho anecdótico, se puede mencionar que el futuro emperador Avito visitó a Teodorico, vivió en su corte e inclusive educó a sus hijos.[3]

Como los romanos tuvieron que enfrentarse a los francos, quienes saquearon Colonia y Tréveris en el 435, y por otros eventos, Teodorico vio la oportunidad de conquistar Narbo Martius (en 436) para obtener acceso al Mediterráneo y a los caminos a los Pirineos. Pero Litorio, también con la ayuda de los hunos, logró impedir la toma de la ciudad y envió a los visigodos de vuelta a su capital Tolosa.[4] La oferta de paz de Teodorico fue rehusada, pero el rey venció en una decisiva batalla en Tolosa, y Litorio pronto murió en cautiverio a causa de las heridas recibidas en la batalla.[5] En ese momento Avito fue a Tolosa (siguiendo las órdenes de Aecio) y ofreció un tratado de paz, que Teodorico aceptó.[6]

Cuando Atila avanzó con su gran ejército hacia Europa Occidental e invadió Galia, Avito logró formar una alianza entre Teodorico y su viejo rival Aecio contra los hunos.[7] Se puede conjeturar que Teodorico aceptó esta coalición porque reconoció el peligro que representaban los hunos para su propio reino. Con su ejército entero y sus hijos Turismundo y Teodorico se unió a Aecio, salvaron la civitas Aurelianorum y obligaron a Atila a retirarse (en junio de 451).[8]

Teodorico murió a mediados de septiembre de 451 en la batalla de los Campos Cataláunicos, en la que la federación formada por romanos, visigodos, alanos, burgundios y francos derrotaron a las huestes de Atila, quien además de los hunos, guiaba a guerreros ostrogodos, escitas, hérulos, gépidos, sármatas y otras tribus germánicas menores.

Fue sucedido por su hijo Turismundo, el cual fue elegido rey en el mismo campo de batalla en que había caído su padre.

Teodorico I o Teodoredo I (? - 451), fue rey de los visigodos desde el año 418 hasta el 451. Era el hijo ilegítimo de Alarico. Con él comienza el linaje de Tolosa (Toulouse). Completó el asentamiento de los Visigodos en Aquitania y expandió sus dominios a Hispania.

Murió en el año 451 en la batalla de los Campos Cataláunicos, en la que la federación formada por romanos, visigodos, alanos, burgundios y francos derrotaron a las huestes de Atila, quién además de los hunos, guiaba a guerreros ostrogodos, escitas, hérulos, gépidos, sármatas y otras tribus germánicas menores.

Fue sucedido por su hijo Turismundo, el cual fue elegido rey en el mismo campo de batalla en que había caído su padre.

(http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teodorico_I)

He was a beneficiary of the roman emperor granting the rich lands of Aquitaine to the visigoths, with capital in Tolosa (Toulouse), where he reigned 419-451. The major event of his career was in the Battle of Chalons (near Orleans) where his forces crucially aided the roman general Aetius in stopping Attila. He died during the battle, in the summer of 451.

http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theoderik_I

Theodorik I was koning van de Visigoten (418-451). Hij groeide op als gijzelaar aan het Romeinse hof en was de jongere broer van Wallia. Gedurende zijn lange regeringsperiode versterkte hij geleidelijk aan de positie van de Visigoten in Gallië. Gedeeltelijk door diplomatieke handigheid en door middel van geweld groeide onder zijn leiderschap de nauwe band tussen de Visigoten en het West-Romeinse Rijk uit tot een hoge mate van autonomie.

Theodoric I, sometimes called Theodorid and in Spanish, Portuguese and Italian Teodorico, was the King of the Visigoths from 418–451. He was the illegitimate son of Alaric. In 418 he succeeded King Wallia.
The Romans had ordered king Wallia to leave Spain and move with his people to Gaul. As king Theodoric completed the settlements of the Visigoths in Gallia Aquitania II, Novempopulana and Gallia Narbonensis. But the Visigoths had no access to the Mediterranean Sea. Theodoric then used the declining power of the Roman Empire to extend his territory to the south. After the death of Emperor Honorius and the usurpation of Joannes in 423 internal power struggles broke out in the Roman Empire. Theodoric used this situation and tried to capture the important road junction Arelate, but the Magister militum Aëtius, who was assisted by the Huns, was able to save the city. The Visigoths concluded a treaty and were given Gallic noblemen as hostages. The later Emperor Avitus visited Theodoric, lived at his court and taught his sons.

Because the Romans had to fight against the Franks, who plundered Cologne and Trier in 435, and because of other events Theodoric saw the chance to conquer Narbo Martius (in 436) to obtain access to the Mediterranean Sea and the roads to the Pyrenees. But Litorius, with the aid of the Huns, could prevent the capture of the city and drove the Visigoths back to their capital Tolosa. The peace offer of Theodoric was refused, but the king won the decisive battle at Tolosa, and Litorius soon died in Gothic imprisonment from the injuries, which he had received in this battle. Avitus went – according to the orders of Aëtius – to Tolosa and offered a peace treaty which Theodoric accepted. Perhaps the Romans recognized at that time the sovereignty of the Visigoth state.

A daughter of Theodoric had been married to Huneric, a son of the Vandal ruler Geiseric (in 429?), but later there was a possibility to marry Huneric to Eudocia, a daughter of the Emperor Valentinian III. Therefore Geiseric accused the daughter of Theodoric that she had planned to kill him; so in 444 she was mutilated and sent back to her father. This action caused an enmity between the Visigoths and the Vandals. An enemy of Aëtius, the former Magister militum Sebastianus, came in 444 to Tolosa. So there could have emerged strained relations to Aëtius, but Theodoric soon sent his unwelcome guest away who captured Barcelona and was later (in 450) executed at the orders of Geiseric. Theodoric was also an enemy of the Suevic king Rechila in Spain, because Visigoth troops assisted the imperial commander Vitus at his campaign against the Suevi in 446. But the ability of this people to conduct a strong defence and the better relations between Geiseric and the Roman Empire led Theodoric to change his foreign policy. He therefore married in February 449 one of his daughters to the new Suevic king Rechiar, who visited his father-in-law at Tolosa in July 449. At the return Rechiar devastated – according to the author Isidore of Seville with the assistance of Visigoth troops – the surrounding area of the city Caesaraugusta and could take Ilerda with a cunning.

Recent scientists doubt, that Theodoric took legislative measures, as it was assumed in earlier times.

When Attila the Hun advanced with his large army to Western Europe and invaded finally Gaul Avitus arranged an alliance between Theodoric and his long-standing enemy Aëtius against the Huns. Probably Theodoric accepted this coalition because he recognized the danger of the Huns to his own realm. With his whole army and his sons Thorismund and Theodoric he joined Aëtius. The Visigoth and Roman troops then saved the civitas Aurelianorum and forced Attila to withdraw (June 451). They followed the Huns and fought against them at the Battle of Chalons near Troyes in about September 451. The most Visigoths fought at the right wing under the command of Theodoric but a smaller force also at the left wing under the command of Thorismund. The troops of Theodoric contributed decisively to the victory of the Romans. Jordanes records two different accounts of his death: one was that Theodoric was thrown from his horse and trampled to death; the second was that Theodoric was slain by the spear of the Ostrogoth Andag, who was the father of Jordanes's patron Gunthigis. The body of Theodoric was only found at the next day. According to Gothic tradition he was mourned and buried by his warriors on the battlefield. Immediately Thorismund was elected as successor of his father. Other sons of Theodoric were Theodoric II, Frederic, Euric, Retimer and Himnerith.

Theodoric I, sometimes called Theodorid and in Spanish, Portuguese and Italian Teodorico, was the King of the Visigoths from 418–451. He was the illegitimate son of Alaric. In 418 he succeeded King Wallia.
The Romans had ordered king Wallia to leave Spain and move with his people to Gaul. As king Theodoric completed the settlements of the Visigoths in Gallia Aquitania II, Novempopulana and Gallia Narbonensis. But the Visigoths had no access to the Mediterranean Sea. Theodoric then used the declining power of the Roman Empire to extend his territory to the south. After the death of Emperor Honorius and the usurpation of Joannes in 423 internal power struggles broke out in the Roman Empire. Theodoric used this situation and tried to capture the important road junction Arelate, but the Magister militum Aëtius, who was assisted by the Huns, was able to save the city. The Visigoths concluded a treaty and were given Gallic noblemen as hostages. The later Emperor Avitus visited Theodoric, lived at his court and taught his sons.

Because the Romans had to fight against the Franks, who plundered Cologne and Trier in 435, and because of other events Theodoric saw the chance to conquer Narbo Martius (in 436) to obtain access to the Mediterranean Sea and the roads to the Pyrenees. But Litorius, with the aid of the Huns, could prevent the capture of the city and drove the Visigoths back to their capital Tolosa. The peace offer of Theodoric was refused, but the king won the decisive battle at Tolosa, and Litorius soon died in Gothic imprisonment from the injuries, which he had received in this battle. Avitus went – according to the orders of Aëtius – to Tolosa and offered a peace treaty which Theodoric accepted. Perhaps the Romans recognized at that time the sovereignty of the Visigoth state.

A daughter of Theodoric had been married to Huneric, a son of the Vandal ruler Geiseric (in 429?), but later there was a possibility to marry Huneric to Eudocia, a daughter of the Emperor Valentinian III. Therefore Geiseric accused the daughter of Theodoric that she had planned to kill him; so in 444 she was mutilated and sent back to her father. This action caused an enmity between the Visigoths and the Vandals. An enemy of Aëtius, the former Magister militum Sebastianus, came in 444 to Tolosa. So there could have emerged strained relations to Aëtius, but Theodoric soon sent his unwelcome guest away who captured Barcelona and was later (in 450) executed at the orders of Geiseric. Theodoric was also an enemy of the Suevic king Rechila in Spain, because Visigoth troops assisted the imperial commander Vitus at his campaign against the Suevi in 446. But the ability of this people to conduct a strong defence and the better relations between Geiseric and the Roman Empire led Theodoric to change his foreign policy. He therefore married in February 449 one of his daughters to the new Suevic king Rechiar, who visited his father-in-law at Tolosa in July 449. At the return Rechiar devastated – according to the author Isidore of Seville with the assistance of Visigoth troops – the surrounding area of the city Caesaraugusta and could take Ilerda with a cunning.

Recent scientists doubt, that Theodoric took legislative measures, as it was assumed in earlier times.

When Attila the Hun advanced with his large army to Western Europe and invaded finally Gaul Avitus arranged an alliance between Theodoric and his long-standing enemy Aëtius against the Huns. Probably Theodoric accepted this coalition because he recognized the danger of the Huns to his own realm. With his whole army and his sons Thorismund and Theodoric he joined Aëtius. The Visigoth and Roman troops then saved the civitas Aurelianorum and forced Attila to withdraw (June 451). They followed the Huns and fought against them at the Battle of Chalons near Troyes in about September 451. The most Visigoths fought at the right wing under the command of Theodoric but a smaller force also at the left wing under the command of Thorismund. The troops of Theodoric contributed decisively to the victory of the Romans. Jordanes records two different accounts of his death: one was that Theodoric was thrown from his horse and trampled to death; the second was that Theodoric was slain by the spear of the Ostrogoth Andag, who was the father of Jordanes's patron Gunthigis. The body of Theodoric was only found at the next day. According to Gothic tradition he was mourned and buried by his warriors on the battlefield. Immediately Thorismund was elected as successor of his father. Other sons of Theodoric were Theodoric II, Frederic, Euric, Retimer and Himnerith.

50o) Teodorico 1o, n. cerca de 390, fal. 451, 4o Rei Godo (419-451), fundador do Reino de Toulouse-Aquitania, com a capital em Bordeaux, e identificado como o 1o reino bárbaro solidamente estabelecido em solo do Império Romano em um “foedus“ ou seja, um território cedido pelo Imperador Romano, em 418, pelo regime de “hospitalitas”. Teodorico morreu em 451, defendendo Toulouse do ataque de Átila, Rei dos Hunos. O Reino de Toulouse durou até 507 quando o seu neto Alarico 2o foi derrotado em Voillé, por Clovis Meroveu, Rei dos Francos. Pai de:
Roi des Wisigoths

4º REI VISIGODO da Espanha. Entronizado em 419 e faleceu em 451 na batalha de Toulouse, contra Átila, o Huno.
His ancestry is found elsewhere on this tree.
The Brave's father was King Alaric of the Visigoths I and his mother was Galla Placida Rome. His maternal grandparents were Theodosius I and Galla Valentiniana of Rome. He had a sister named Basina. He was the older of the two children. He had a half-brother and a half-sister, named Flavius and Justa.

Died fighting Atilla
http://gw.geneanet.org/nobily?lang=fr;pz=elisabeth+therese+marie+helene;nz=de+belgique;ocz=0;p=theodoric;n=amales (Théodoric Amales) Titres: Roi des Wisigoths (418)
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Teodorico I
 Rey de los VisigodosHispaniaAquitania
De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

Teodorico I
Rey de los Visigodos

Retrato idealizado de Teodorico I, por Félix Castelo (1635, Museo del Prado).
Información personal
Reinado 418-451
Fallecimiento 20 de septiembre del 451
Batalla de los Campos Cataláunicos
Predecesor Walia
Sucesor Turismundo
Familia
Dinastía Baltinga
Padre Alarico I
Consorte Flavia Valiana
Descendencia Turismundo, Teodorico y Eurico
[editar datos en Wikidata]
Teodorico I o Teodoredo (?-451) fue un rey de los visigodos. Era hijo ilegítimo de Alarico.[1]​ No obstante, según nuevas investigaciones,[2]​ Teodorico I era el yerno de Alarico I. En el año 418 sucedió a Walia, reinando hasta el 451. Con él comienza el linaje de Tolosa (Toulouse). Completó el asentamiento de los visigodos en Aquitania y expandió sus dominios a Hispania. Su nombre original era Þjudareiks ("Rey del Pueblo"), latinizado Theodericus.

Biografía
Los romanos habían ordenado a Walia abandonar Hispania y trasladarse con su gente a Galia. Por lo tanto Teodorico, como su sucesor, completó los asentamientos visigóticos en Gallia Aquitania II, Novempopulania y Gallia Narbonensis. Pero los visigodos no tenían acceso al Mar Mediterráneo. Teodorico aprovechó entonces la decadencia del Imperio romano para extender sus territorios hacia el sur. Tras la muerte del emperador Flavio Honorio y la usurpación de Joannes en 423, hubo pugnas dentro del Imperio y en el año 425 Teodorico intentó conquistar Arlés, pero se lo impidió el Magister militum Aecio, quien fue asistido por los hunos.[3]​Entonces los visigodos acordaron un tratado y se les dio nobles galos como rehenes. Como hecho anecdótico, se puede mencionar que el futuro emperador Avito visitó a Teodorico, vivió en su corte e incluso educó a sus hijos.[4]​

Suegro del suevo Rechiario, primer rey católico de un reino germánico surgido de las invasiones del siglo V.[5]​

Acceso al Mediterráneo
Como los romanos tuvieron que enfrentarse a los francos, quienes saquearon Colonia y Tréveris en el 435, y por otros eventos, Teodorico vio la oportunidad de conquistar Narbo Martius en el año 436, para obtener acceso al Mediterráneo y a los caminos a los Pirineos. Pero Litorio, también con la ayuda de los hunos, logró impedir la toma de la ciudad y envió a los visigodos de vuelta a su capital Tolosa.[6]​ La oferta de paz de Teodorico fue rehusada, pero el rey venció en una decisiva batalla en Tolosa, y Litorio pronto murió en cautiverio a causa de las heridas recibidas en la batalla.[7]​ En ese momento Avito fue a Tolosa (siguiendo las órdenes de Aecio) y ofreció un tratado de paz, que Teodorico aceptó.[8]​

En 436 rompió otra vez la guerra con los Romanos; sitió y estrechó á Narbona, cuya empresa tuvo que abandonar por la mediacion de Avíto. Theodorico, no pudiendo obtener la paz que pedia á los Romanos que tenían sitiada á Tolosa, les presentó batalla, en la que salió vencedor, tomando prisionero á su General Litório en 439.
Capmany y de Montpalau, Antonio de|. (n.d.). Compendio cronológico-histórico de los Soberanos de Europa. Primera Parte. D.Miguel Escribano (1784).
Atila
Cuando Atila avanzó con su gran ejército hacia Europa Occidental e invadió Galia, Avito logró formar una alianza entre Teodorico y su viejo rival Aecio contra los hunos.[9]​ Se puede conjeturar que Teodorico aceptó esta coalición porque reconoció el peligro que representaban los hunos para su propio reino. Con su ejército entero y sus hijos Turismundo y Teodorico se unió a Aecio, salvaron la civitas Aurelianorum y obligaron a Atila a retirarse (en junio de 451).[10]​

Teodorico murió a mediados de septiembre de 451 en la colosal batalla de las naciones que se libró en Mauriaco, no lejos de Metz, in campis Catalaunicis, en la que la federación formada por romanos, visigodos, alanos, burgundios y francos derrotaron a las huestes de Atila, quien además de los hunos, guiaba a guerreros ostrogodos, escitas, hérulos, gépidos, sármatas y otras tribus germánicas menores. La honra de la victoria correspondió al ala mandada por Teodoredo, que atacó el grueso de los hunos, haciendo retirarse al mismo Atila en la confusión de la noche.

... Cuando amaneció, Turismundo y los visigodos encontraron entre un gran montón de cadáveres el del rey Teodoredo, cuyo sacrificio señalaba el final de la carrera invencible de Atila. La lucha era de germanos contra germanos, de visigodos contra ostrogodos y hunos; el Imperio apenas contaba; así, esta dolorosa victoria no suscitó, como las de Estilicón, clásicos poemas de un Claudiano o un Prudencio, sino extraños epinicios, los informes cantos visigóticos en las exequias de Teodoredo, de que Jordanes habla, coreados con el fúnebre son de las armas entrechocadas...
Ramón Menéndez Pidal, Universalismo y Nacionalismo. Romanos y Germanos.[11]​
Fue sucedido por su hijo Turismundo, el cual fue elegido rey en el mismo campo de batalla en que había caído su padre. Aecio, temeroso del éxito visigodo, permite la huida de Atila sin persecución, pues con engañosas razones hizo que Turismundo regresara a Tolosa de Francia.

 Wikimedia Commons alberga una categoría multimedia sobre Teodorico I.
↑ Gibbon, Edward. The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Archivado desde el original el 14 de septiembre de 2004.
↑ G. Kampers, 2005, p. 419.
↑ Próspero, Epitoma chronicon 1290, en: MGH Auctores antiquissimi (AA) 9, p. 471; Chronica Gallica de 452, 102, en: MGH AA 9, p. 658; Sidonio Apolinar, Cartas 7. 12. 3
↑ Sidonio Apolinar, Carmen 7. 215sqq.; 7. 495sqq.
↑ José Orlandis: Historia de España, 4. Época visigoda (409-711), Editorial Gredos, 1987. ISBN 84-249-1250-0 (Tomo 4), pág. 40.
↑ Próspero, Epitoma chronicon 1324 y 1326, en: MGH AA 9, p. 475; Hidacio, crónica 107 und 110, en: MGH AA 11, pp. 22-23; Merobaudes, Panegírico, fragmento II A 23, en: Vollmer, MGH AA 14, p. 9; Sidonio Apolinar, Carmen 7. 246sqq.; 7. 475sqq.
↑ Próspero, Epitoma chronicon 1335, en: MGH AA 9, p. 476; Hidacio, Crónica 116, en: MGH AA 11, p. 23; Salviano, De gubernatione dei 7. 9. 39sqq.
↑ Próspero, Epitoma chronicon 1338, en: MGH AA 9, p. 477; Hidacio, Crónica 117, en: MGH AA 11, p. 23; Sidonio Apolinar, Carmen 7. 295sqq.
↑ Sidonio Apolinar, Carmen 7. 332sqq.; 7. 336sqq.; 7. 352sqq.; Próspero, Epitoma chronicon 1364, en: MGH AA 9, p. 481; comparar con Jordanes, Getica 36. 187sqq.
↑ Sidonio Apolinar, Carmen 7, 346sqq.; Cartas 7. 12. 3; 8. 15. 1; Jordanes, Getica 37. 195; Gregorio de Tours, Historia Francorum 2. 7; Vita S. Aniani 7 y 10, en: MGH, Scriptores rerum Merovingicarum 3. 112–113; 3. 115-116
↑ Cita la obra de Jordanes De origine actibusque Getarum (El origen y las hazañas de los Godos),
Enßlin, Wilhelm: «Theoderich I.» En: Realencyclopädie der Classischen Altertumswissenschaft, vol. V A 2, coll. 1735-1740.
Kampers, G.: «Theoderid.» En: Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde, vol. 30 (2005), pp. 419-421.

Predecesor:
Walia Rey de los visigodos
418-451 Sucesor:
Turismundo
Control de autoridades
Proyectos WikimediaWd Datos: Q110892Commonscat Multimedia: Teodorico I
IdentificadoresWorldCatVIAF: 67261267GND: 118756745Diccionarios y enciclopediasBritannica: url
Wd Datos: Q110892Commonscat Multimedia: Teodorico I


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