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VISIGOTHS - THEUDIS

 

Theudis (in Spanish, Teudis, in Portuguese Têudis) was king of the Visigoths in Hispania from 531-548.

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.

During his reign the sole codification of law since Euric was realized. It was promulgated in November 546 with numerous Roman quotations.

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 defense of Ceuta in 542, when the Byzantines besieged it from land and sea.

In 548, he was assassinated in his Barcelonan palace (or in Seville) by the pretender Theudigisel.

 

Preceded by
Amalaric
King of the Visigoths
531–548
Succeeded by
Theudigisel


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References:
Edward Gibbon, History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, chapter 31 .