Burgundian
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Assorted References
- division of Germanic people
- In Germanic peoples
…nothing of the Saxons, the Burgundians, and others who became prominent after his time.
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- In Germanic peoples
- issuance of coinage
- In coin: Post-Roman coinage in the West
In Gaul the Burgundians struck their own imitative gold thirds, first, under Gundobad (473–516), inscribed with a royal monogram, though not yet displacing the imperial name and portrait. The largest of the Gaulish coinages, however, was that of the Merovingian Franks, beginning with Clovis I (481–511). The gold…
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- In coin: Post-Roman coinage in the West
history
- Armagnac
- Gaul
- In France: The end of Roman Gaul (c. 400–c. 500)
By 418, Franks and Burgundians were established west of the Rhine, and the Visigoths settled in Aquitania (Aquitaine). These Germans, however, were nominally allies of the empire, and, mainly because of the energy of the Roman general Flavius Aetius, they were kept in check. The death of Aetius in…
Read More - In France: The conquest of Burgundy
…two campaigns to overcome the Burgundian kingdom. In 523 Clodomir, Childebert I, and Chlotar I, as allies of Theodoric the Great, king of the Ostrogoths, moved into Burgundy, whose king, Sigismund, Theodoric’s son-in-law, had assassinated his own son. Sigismund was captured and killed. Godomer, the new Burgundian king, defeated the…
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- In France: The end of Roman Gaul (c. 400–c. 500)
- Hundred Years’ War
- In Hundred Years’ War: Henry IV, the Armagnacs, and the Burgundians
…France was divided between the Burgundian faction and the Armagnacs, the latter taking their name from Bernard VII, count of Armagnac, who became the leader of the movement to avenge the duke’s murder. Under these circumstances, both sides in the civil war in turn sounded Henry IV in an attempt…
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- In Hundred Years’ War: Henry IV, the Armagnacs, and the Burgundians
- Roman Empire
- In Burgundy: History of Burgundy
The Burgundians were a Scandinavian people whose original homeland lay on the southern shores of the Baltic Sea, where the island of Bornholm (Burgundarholm in the Middle Ages) still bears their name. About the 1st century ce they moved into the lower valley of the Vistula…
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- In Burgundy: History of Burgundy
- Switzerland
- In Switzerland: Germanic invasions
…Germanic tribes such as the Burgundians, Alemannians, and Langobardians (in Ticino). Few in number, the Burgundians occupied the lands of western Switzerland. They retained political control in Switzerland but lost contact with their former homelands and were assimilated into the Roman Celtic population. The French-speaking part of present-day Switzerland is…
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- In Switzerland: Germanic invasions