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Theudis (in Spanish, Teudis) was king of the Visigoths in Hispania from 531-548 CE. (Theudis is the name assigned him by Isidore of Seville, his real name was probably Theodoric.) The Visigoths, originally Tervingi, or Vesi (the noble ones), one of the two main branches of the Goths (of which the Ostrogothi were the other), were one of the loosely-termed Germanic peoples that disturbed the late Roman Empire. ...
Jump to: navigation, search Roman aqueduct in Segovia Hispania was the name given by the Romans to the whole of the Iberian Peninsula (modern Portugal, Spain, Andorra and Gibraltar) and to two provinces created there in the period of the Roman Republic: Hispania Citerior and Hispania Ulterior. ...
Events End of the reign of Northern Wei Chang Guang Wang, ruler of the Chinese Northern Wei Dynasty. ...
Events Belisarius is relieved of command over the Byzantine forces in Italy and replaced with Narses. ...
It has been suggested that Isidro be merged into this article or section. ...
After the death of Amalaric, last of the Balti dynasty, the strongman Theudis, a former commander of Theodoric the Great, was elected king. He transferred the capital from Narbonne to Barcelona. Amalaric (died 531), king of the Visigoths, son of Alaric II, was a child when his father fell in battle against Clovis I, king of the Franks, in (507). ...
The Balti dynasty existed among the Visigoths, a Germanic people who confronted the Roman Empire in its declining years in the west. ...
Jump to: navigation, search Tomb of Theodoric in Ravenna Theodoric the Great (454 - August 30, 526), known to the Romans as Flavius Theodoricus, was king of the East Goths, the Ostrogoths (488-526), ruler of Italy (493-526), and regent of the Visigoths (511-526). ...
Cathedral in Narbonne. ...
Jump to: navigation, search Barcelona within Barcelonès Population (2003) 1,582,738 Area 100. ...
During his reign the sole codification of law since Euric was realized. It was promulgated in November 546 with numerous Roman quotations. Euric, also known as Eurico, Evaric, or Erwig, (c. ...
Jump to: navigation, search For other uses, see November (disambiguation). ...
Events The Ostrogoths under Totila retake Rome from the Byzantine Empire. ...
In 541 he had to confront the Franks under Chlothar I and Childebert I, who had penetrated as far as Pamplona and Zaragoza, which they besieged for forty-nine days. After successfully defending it he drove them out of the country. However, he didn't come to the defence of Ceuta in 542 when the Byzantines besieged from land and sea. Events January 1 - Flavius Basilius Junior appointed as consul in Constantinople, the last person to hold this office January 2 - Earthquake strikes Laodicea. ...
Jump to: navigation, search Hi my name is Bob what is yours dear lady. ...
Clotaire I (or Chlothar or Chloderic) (497 â 561), a king of the Franks, was one of the four sons of Clovis. ...
Childebert I was born about 496 at Rheims, in the Marne, département, of France and died in 558. ...
Jump to: navigation, search Pamplona (Basque: Irunea / Iruñea / Iruña) is the capital city of Navarre, Spain. ...
Zaragozas location in Spain Zaragoza (frequently Saragossa in English; Latin Caesaraugusta) is the capital city of the autonomous region and former kingdom of Aragón in Spain, and is located on the river Ebro, and its tributaries the Huerva and Gállego, near the centre of the region, in...
Jump to: navigation, search Eastern Ceuta, as photographed from Morocco. ...
Events The plague killed upwards of 100,000 in Constantinople and perhaps two million or more in the rest of the Byzantine Empire (possibly exaggerated). ...
Byzantine Empire is the term conventionally used to describe the Roman Empire during the Middle Ages, centered around its capital in Constantinople. ...
In 548 he was assassinated in his Barcelonan palace by a pretendant crazy. Events Belisarius is relieved of command over the Byzantine forces in Italy and replaced with Narses. ...
Sources and external links
J.B. Bury. History of the Later Roman Empire, Chapter 19, section 14. Edward Gibbon, History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Chapter 41. |