Alboin (d.
572 or
573), king of the
Lombards, and conqueror of
Italy, succeeded his father
Audoin[?] about
565. The
Lombards were at that time dwelling in
Noricum and
Pannonia
(archduchy of
Austria,
Styria and
Hungary, west of the
Danube). In alliance with the
Avars, an Asiatic people
who had invaded central Europe, Alboin defeated the
Gepidae,
a powerful nation on his eastern frontier, slew their king
Cunimund[?], whose skull he fashioned into a drinking-cup, and
whose daughter Rosamund he carried off and made his wife.
Three years later (in
568), on the alleged invitation of
Narses, who was irritated by the treatment he had received
from the emperor
Justin II, Alboin invaded
Italy, probably
marching over the pass of the
Predil[?]. He overran
Venetia and
the wide district which we now call
Lombardy, meeting with
but feeble resistance till he came to the city of Ticinum
(
Pavia), which for three years (
569-
572) kept the Lombards at
bay.
While this siege was in progress Alboin was also engaged
in other parts of Italy, and at its close he was probably
master of Lombardy, Piedmont and Tuscany, as well as of the
regions which afterwards went by the name of the duchies
of Spoleto[?] and Benevento. In 572 or 573, however, he was
assassinated by his chamberlain Peredeo[?] at the instigation
of Queen Rosamund[?], whom Alboin had grievously insulted by
forcing her to drink wine out of her father's skull. After
his death and the short reign of his successor Cleph[?] the
Lombards remained for more than ten years without a king, ruled by the various dukes.
The authorities for the history of Alboin are Procopius, Paul the Deacon and Agnellus[?] (in his history of the church of Ravenna).
Initial text from 1911 encyclopedia -- Please update as needed
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