Grasulf del FriuliEtà: 51 anni520571

Nome
Grasulf del Friuli
Nascita tra il 520 e il 530 40 13

Nascita di un fratelloAlboino dei Longobardi
526
Morte di un nonno maternoErmanafrido di Turingia
534 (Età 14 anni)
Nascita di un figlio
n° 1
«Gisulf» I del Friuli
tra il 540 e il 550 (Età 20 anni)

Morte di una nonna maternaAmalaberga ??
tra il 534 e il 595 (Età 14 anni)

Morte del padreAudoino dei Longobardi
circa 565 (Età 45 anni)

Morte della madreRodelinda di Turingia
tra il 534 e il 575 (Età 14 anni)

Morte tra il 571 e il 572 (Età 51 anni)

Famiglia con genitori - View this family
padre
madre
himself
7 anni
fratello
Grasulf del Friuli + … … - View this family
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figlio

Nota

http://www.worldlingo.com/ma/enwiki/en/Grasulf_I_of_Friuli Grasul f I (died after 571) was a brother of Alboin, the first Lombard King o f Italy, and possibly the first Duke of Friuli. Grasulf's son, Gisulf , is the other candidate for first Duke of Friuli. Paul the Deacon nam es Gisulf, but some scholars have favoured Grasulf based on a diplomat ic letter which refers to him as duke. This letter was written by Gog o, Frankish mayor of the palace of Austrasia under Sigebert I and Chil debert II, sometime between Gogo's rise to power in 571 and his deat h in 581. Sadly it is undated and unattached to the name of either kin g he served. It has traditionally been assigned to around the year o f his death (581), but an alternative solution put forward by Walter G offart places it as early as 571–572 around the time of Sigebert's e mbassy to Constantinople. In it Gogo urges Grasulf to ally himself wit h the Franks to oust the infestantes (presumably the Lombards) from It aly in league with the Byzantine Empire and the Papacy. Ambassadors we re waiting in Austrasia for Grasulf's reply in case he wished to dela y his response to the emperor. While the exact location of Grasulf' s seat of power is unknown, if he did rule, the letter from Gogo is ev idence that the "Friulian court" was capable of handling sophisticate d imperial correspondence less than a decade after the Lombard arriva l on Italian soil. Sources Bachrach, Bernard S. The Anatomy of a Li ttle War: A Diplomatic and Military History of the Gundovald Affair (5 68–586). Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1994. Everett, Nicholas. Lite racy in Lombard Italy, c. 568–774. Cambridge: Cambridge University P ress, 2003. ISBN 0 521 81905 9. Nelson, Janet L. "Queens as Jezebels : Brunhild and Balthild in Merovingian History." Medieval Women: Essay s Dedicated and Presented to Professor Rosalind M. T. Hill, ed. D. Bak er. Studies in Church History: Subsidia, vol. 1 (Oxford: Blackwell, 19 78), pp. 31–77. Reprinted in Politics and Ritual in Early Medieval E urope. London: Hambledon Press, 1986. ISBN 0 907628 59 1.