Kingdom of the Burgundians

The Kingdom of the Burgundians or First Kingdom of Burgundy was established by Germanic Burgundians in the Rhineland and then in Savoy in the 5th century.

Kingdom of the Burgundians

Regnum Burgundionum[1]
411–534
The First Kingdom of the Burgundians, after the settlement in Savoy from 443
Capital
Common languages
Religion
GovernmentMonarchy
King 
 411-437
Gunther
 532-534
Godomar
History 
 Gunther is granted land on the left bank of the Rhine by Honorius
411
 Godomar is defeated by Childebert I and Clothar I at the Battle of Autun
534
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Western Roman Empire
Frankish Kingdom
Today part of

History

Background

The Burgundians, an East Germanic tribe, may have migrated from the Scandinavian island of Bornholm to the Vistula basin in the 3rd century AD. The first documented, though not historically verified King of the Burgundians, Gjúki (Gebicca), lived in the late 4th century.

In 406 the Alans, Vandals, Suevi, and possibly the Burgundians, crossed the Rhine and invaded Roman Gaul. The Burgundians settled as foederati in the Roman province of Germania Secunda along the Middle Rhine.

Kingdom

In 411 AD, the Burgundian king Gunther (or Gundahar or Gundicar) in cooperation with Goar, king of the Alans, set up Jovinus as a puppet emperor. Under the pretext of Jovinus' imperial authority, Gunther settled on the western (i.e., Roman) bank of the Rhine, between the river Lauter and the Nahe, seizing the settlements of Borbetomagus (present day Worms), Speyer, and Strasbourg. Apparently as part of a truce, the Emperor Honorius later officially "granted" them the land. The Burgundians established their capital at Borbetomagus. Olympiodorus of Thebes also mentions a Guntiarios who was called "commander of the Burgundians" in the context of the 411 usurping of Germania Secunda by Jovinus.[2]

Despite their new status as foederati, Burgundian raids into Roman upper Gallia Belgica became intolerable to the Romans and were ruthlessly brought to an end in 436, when the Roman general Flavius Aetius called in Hun mercenaries who overwhelmed the kingdom in 437. Gunther was killed in the fighting, reportedly along with the majority of the Burgundians.[3] The campaign was the origin of the mediæval Nibelungenlied poem.

Gunther was succeeded as king by Gunderic (or Gundioc or Gondioc) in 437. After 443, the remaining Burgundians were resettled by Aetius to the Sapaudia (i.e. Savoy) region of present-day central France, again as foederati, in the Roman province of Maxima Sequanorum, where they established their capital at Lugdunum (present-day Lyon). Their efforts to enlarge their kingdom down the Rhone river brought them into conflict with the Visigothic Kingdom in the south. In 451, Gunderic joined forces with Aetius against Attila, leader of the Huns, in the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains.

When Gunderic died in 473, his kingdom was divided among his four sons: Gundobad (473516 in Lyon, king of all of Burgundy from 480), Chilperic II (473493 in Valence), Gundomar/Godomar (473486 in Vienne) and Godegisel (473500, in Vienne and Geneva).

Europe at the fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476 AD.

After the fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476, King Gundobad allied with the mighty Frankish king Clovis I against the threat of the Ostrogothic king, Theoderic the Great. Gundobad was thereby able to secure the Burgundian acquisitions, and compile the Lex Burgundionum, an Ancient Germanic law code. Later, when Rome was no longer able to afford protection to the inhabitants of Gaul, the Sequani became merged in the newly formed Kingdom of Burgundy.[4]

According to Gregory of Tours (538–594), in 493 Gundobad slew his brother Chilperic II and exiled his daughter Clotilde, who was married to the Merovingian Clovis, King of the Franks, who had just conquered northern Gaul. The decline of the kingdom began when they came under attack from their former Frankish allies. In 523, the sons of King Clovis campaigned in the Burgundian lands, instigated by their mother Clotilde, in revenge for Gundobad's murder of her father. In 532, the Burgundians were decisively defeated by the Franks at the Battle of Autun, whereafter King Godomar was killed and Burgundy incorporated into the Frankish kingdom in 534.

List of kings

  • Gebicca (late 4th century c. 407)
  • Gundomar I (c. 407 411), son of Gebicca
  • Giselher (c. 407 411), son of Gebicca
  • Gunther (c. 407 436), son of Gebicca

Flavius Aëtius moves the Burgundians into Sapaudia (Upper Rhône Basin).

  • Gunderic/Gundioc (436473) opposed by
  • division of the kingdom among the four sons of Gundioc:
    • Gundobad (473516 in Lyon, king of all of Burgundy from 480),
    • Chilperic II (473493 in Valence)
    • Gundomar/Godomar (473486 in Vienne)
    • Godegisel (473500, in Vienne and Geneva)
  • Sigismund, son of Gundobad (516524)
  • Godomar II or Gundimar, son of Gundobad (524532)
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References

  1. Hallam, Henry (1871). View of the State of Europe During the Middle Ages by Henry Hallam , Incorporating in the Text Authorʼs Latest Researches, with Addidions from Recent Writers, and Adpted to the Use of Students. J. Murray. p. 63.
  2. Prosper, a. 386
  3. Prosper; Chronica Gallica 452; Hydatius; and Sidonius Apollinaris.
  4. Chisholm 1911.

Sources

  • Bury, J.B. The Invasion of Europe by the Barbarians. London: Macmillan and Co., 1928.
  • Dalton, O.M. The History of the Franks, by Gregory of Tours. Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1927.
  • Drew, Katherine Fischer. The Burgundian Code. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1972.
  • Gordon, C.D. The Age of Attila. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1961.
  • Guichard, Rene, Essai sur l'histoire du peuple burgonde, de Bornholm (Burgundarholm) vers la Bourgogne et les Bourguignons, 1965, published by A. et J. Picard et Cie.
  • Murray, Alexander Callander. From Roman to Merovingian Gaul. Broadview Press, 2000.
  • Musset, Lucien. The Germanic Invasions: The Making of Europe AD 400-600. University Park, Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1975.
  • Nerman, Birger. Det svenska rikets uppkomst. Generalstabens litagrafiska anstalt: Stockholm. 1925.
  • Rivers, Theodore John. Laws of the Salian and Ripuarian Franks. New York: AMS Press, 1986.
  • Rolfe, J.C., trans, Ammianus Marcellinus. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1950.
  • Shanzer, Danuta. ‘Dating the Baptism of Clovis.’ In Early Medieval Europe, volume 7, pages 29–57. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers Ltd, 1998.
  • Shanzer, D. and I. Wood. Avitus of Vienne: Letters and Selected Prose. Translated with an Introduction and Notes. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2002.
  • Werner, J. (1953). "Beiträge zur Archäologie des Attila-Reiches", Die Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaft. Abhandlungen. N.F. XXXVIII A Philosophische-philologische und historische Klasse. Münche
  • Wood, Ian N. ‘Ethnicity and the Ethnogenesis of the Burgundians’. In Herwig Wolfram and Walter Pohl, editors, Typen der Ethnogenese unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Bayern, volume 1, pages 53–69. Vienna: Denkschriften der Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1990.
  • Wood, Ian N. The Merovingian Kingdoms. Harlow, England: The Longman Group, 1994.
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