Agilulf
Agilulf
Main page
1902543

Agilulf

logo
Community Hub0 subscribers
What are your thoughts?
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Agilulf

Agilulf (c. 555 – April 616), also known as the Thuringian, was a Duke of Turin and king of the Lombards from 591 until his death. A relative of his predecessor Authari, Agilulf was of Thuringian origin and belonged to the Anawas clan.

He is sometimes referred to as dux Turingorum de Taurinis, suggesting that he was a prominent leader among the Thuringians who had joined the Lombards following the fall of their kingdom to the Franks in 531.

Agilulf was chosen as king on the advice of Theodelinda, the Christian queen and widow of Authari, whom he subsequently married. Although he assumed the royal title in November 590, his formal investiture—being raised on a shield by Lombard warriors—took place in Milan in May 591.

He was baptized to appease his wife, and the nation followed suit—though initially adopting the Arian rather than the Roman Catholic faith. In 603, under Theodelinda's influence, Agilulf converted to Catholicism and had his son, Adaloald, baptized in the same rite. Together, Agilulf and Theodelinda built and endowed the Cathedral of Monza, where the Iron Crown of Lombardy is still preserved. Agilulf's own crown, now lost, was also kept there; it was dedicated to St John and inscribed with rex totius Italiae ("king of all Italy"), reflecting how Agilulf evidently regarded his authority.

Agilulf's long reign was marked by the cessation of hostilities with Francia following the death of its chief peacemaker, Guntram, King of Burgundy, in 592. Without Guntram's moderating influence, the Franks fell into civil war, preventing any coordinated assault on Lombard territory throughout Agilulf's rule.

In 598, he concluded a truce with the Papacy, temporarily ending three decades of Lombard incursions into the Ducatus Romanus. With peace in the west, Agilulf concentrated his military efforts on the Byzantine threat. That same year, he consolidated Lombard control in central Italy by capturing Sutri, Perugia, and other Umbrian cities from the Exarchate of Ravenna, while also maintaining friendly relations with Bavaria.

He campaigned successfully against the Avars and Slavs, and negotiated a truce with the Byzantine emperor Maurice in 598, with the assistance of Pope Gregory the Great. However, the peace was short-lived. In 599, the Exarch Callinicus violated the truce by abducting Agilulf's daughter while she was travelling.

War resumed, and in 602, the Byzantine emperor Phocas lost Padua, which had already been isolated from Ravenna during the reign of Authari. The fall of Padua cut off Mantua, which also fell to Agilulf before the year ended.

See all
User Avatar
No comments yet.