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{{Short description|Merovingian king of Austrasia (c. 500–547)}} {{Infobox royalty | name = Theudebert I | image = File:Münze Gold Solidus Theudebert I um 534 (obverse).jpg | caption = Gold [[Solidus (coin)|solidus]] minted by Theudebert at Mainz around 534 | succession = King of Austrasia | reign = 533–548 | predecessor = [[Theuderic I]] | successor = [[Theudebald]] | birth_date = {{c.|500}} | death_date = 548 | spouse = [[Wisigard]]<br />[[Deuteria]] | issue = [[Theudebald]]<br />Berthoara | house = [[Merovingian dynasty]] | father = [[Theuderic I]] }} '''Theudebert I''' ({{langx|fr|Thibert/Théodebert}}) ({{c.|500}}–548) was the [[Merovingian]] king of [[Austrasia]] from 533 to his death in 548. He was the son of [[Theuderic I]] and the father of [[Theudebald]]. ==Sources== Most of what we know about Theudebert comes from the ''Histories'' or ''History of the Franks'' written by [[Gregory of Tours]] in the second half of the sixth century. In addition, we have diplomatic correspondence composed at the Austrasian court (known as the ''[[Austrasian Letters]]''), the poems of [[Venantius Fortunatus]], an account from [[Procopius]]' work<ref>{{Cite web |title=Procopius and Britain |url=http://www.geocities.com/vortigernstudies/fabio/app4.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20021119094645/http://www.geocities.com/vortigernstudies/fabio/app4.htm |archive-date=19 November 2002 |website=Vortigern Studies website}}</ref> and a small number of other sources. ==History== During his father's reign, the young Theudebert had shown himself to be an able warrior. In 516 he defeated a Danish army under King Chlochilaich ([[Hygelac]] of ''[[Beowulf]]'') after it had raided northern Gaul.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Flierman |first=Robert |title=Saxon Identities, AD 150–900 |publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |year=2017 |page=60}}</ref> His reputation was further enhanced by a series of military campaigns in [[Septimania]] against the [[Visigoths]].<ref name="Julius">{{Cite book |last=von Pflugk-Harttung |first=Julius Albert G. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bB46AQAAIAAJ&pg=PA75 |title=The Early Middle Ages |last2=Wright |first2=John Henry |publisher=Lea Brothers |year=1905 |volume=7}}</ref> Upon his father's death, Theudebert had to fight both his uncles [[Childebert I|Childebert]] and [[Clotaire I]] to inherit his father's kingdom. In the end, his military prowess persuaded Childebert to abandon the dispute and adopt Theudebert as his heir.<ref name=Julius/> Together they campaigned against Clotaire but sued for peace after their armies were hit by a storm. After relations between the Frankish kings had settled down, Theudebert found himself embroiled in the [[Gothic War (535–554)|Gothic War]] started when the Byzantine Emperor [[Justinian I]] attempted to subdue the [[Ostrogoths]] in Italy. Justinian saw Theudebert as an ideal ally: Austrasian lands flanked the Ostrogoths in northern Italy. The emperor paid Theudebert handsomely for his assistance, but Theudebert proved an untrustworthy ally. The Frankish armies saw the Italian conflict as an opportunity for plunder and a chance to exert their own claims to northern Italy. In the event the Byzantines were forced to fight the Franks as much as the Ostrogoths. Theudebert seems to have revelled in his power growing on the European stage. His letters show him laying claim to a vast array of lands around Austrasia, including Byzantine lands.<ref>''Epistolae Austrasicae XX''</ref> Since the fall of the Roman Empire, the Frankish kings had always shown a certain deference to the Byzantine Emperor, but Theudebert rejected his status as an inferior leader: for example, he broke imperial custom by minting gold coins containing his own image. Hitherto former Frankish kings had respected imperial convention and circulated gold coins with the image of the emperor.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Oman |first=Charles |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PDkNAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA522 |title=The Dark Ages, 476-918 |publisher=Rivingtons |year=1908 |page=117}} {{PD-notice}}</ref> Not surprisingly, perhaps, the Byzantine chronicler [[Agathias]] recorded the rumour in [[Constantinople]] that the Byzantines suspected Theudebert of planning an invasion of Thrace. In common with other Frankish rulers at the time, Theudebert took several wives as and when he wanted. As heir to his father's kingdom, he was betrothed to [[Wisigard]], daughter of [[Wacho]], king of the [[Lombards]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Effros |first=Bonnie |title=Merovingian Mortuary Archaeology and the Making of the Early Middle Ages |publisher=University of California Press |year=2003 |page=124}}</ref> This sort of political match was rare for the Merovingian kings. Theudebert abandoned her for [[Deuteria]], a [[Gallo-Roman]] he had met while on campaign in southern Gaul. However, his supporters were not best pleased by his treatment of Wisigard, perhaps because of the political dimension, and persuaded Theudebert to take her back. Wisigard, though, soon died, and Theudebert married again. As well as being renowned for his military prowess, Theudebert was lauded by contemporaries for his patronage of the Gallic (French) Church. Gregory of Tours reserves special praise for him in this regard, but his piety is also mentioned by Fortunatus. Theudebert died in the 14th year of his reign (at the end of 547 or the beginning of 548). He was killed by a bison during a hunting party.<ref>Agathias, ''Histoires'', {{nobr|Livre I}}, chapter 5 in ''Agathias - Histoires, Introduction, traduction et notes par [[Pierre Maraval]]'', ed. ''[[Les Belles Lettres]]'', {{ISBN|978-2-251-33950-4}}</ref> [[Theudebald]], his son by Deuteria, succeeded him. In contrast to that experienced by many Merovingian kings, Theudebald's accession was peaceful.{{sfn|Oman|1908|p=118}} ==References== {{commons category|Theodebert I}} {{Reflist}} {{s-start}} {{s-hou|[[Merovingian dynasty]]||500||548}} {{s-bef|before=[[Theuderic I]]}} {{s-ttl|title=[[List of Frankish kings|King of Rheims]]|years=533–548}} {{s-aft|after=[[Theodobald]]}} {{s-end}} {{Merovingians}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:Frankish warriors]] [[Category:Merovingian kings]] [[Category:500s births]] [[Category:540s deaths]] [[Category:6th-century Frankish kings]]
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