See also

Family of Amalric + and Clotilda + of FRANCE

Husband: Amalric + (502-531)
Wife: Clotilda + of FRANCE (500- )
Children: Leovigild + (519-586)

Husband: Amalric +

Name: Amalric +
Sex: Male
Father: Alaric II + (475-507)
Mother: Theodogotha + (473- )
Birth 0502
Occupation King of the Visigoths
Title frm 0526 to 0531 (age 23-29) King of the Visigoths
Death 0531 (age 28-29) Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Cause: assassinated by his own troops after defeat in the battle for Narbonne

Wife: Clotilda + of FRANCE

Name: Clotilda + of FRANCE
Sex: Female
Father: Clovis I + (467-511)
Mother: Clothilde + of BURGUNDY (475-548)
Birth 0500

Child 1: Leovigild +

Name: Leovigild +
Sex: Male
Spouse: Theodosia + of the OSTRAGOTHS (525- )
Birth 0519
Occupation King of the Visigoths
Title King of the Visigoths
Death 0586 (age 66-67)

Note on Husband: Amalric +

Amalaric, or in Spanish and Portuguese, Amalarico, (502[1] – 531) was a son of king Alaric II and of Theodegotho, daughter of Theodoric the Great and his first wife. Amalaric was himself king of the Visigoths from 526 till he was assassinated in 531.[2]

 

He was a child when his father fell in battle against Clovis I, king of the Franks, in 507. Gesalec was chosen king and the child Amalaric was carried for safety into Hispania. After Gesalec was killed in 511, the country and Provence was thenceforth ruled by Amalaric's maternal grandfather, Theodoric the Ostrogoth, acting through his vice regent, Theudis, an Ostrogothic nobleman. In 522 the young Amalaric was proclaimed king, and four years later, on Theodoric's death, he assumed full royal power in Hispania and that part of Languedoc called Septimania, relinquishing Provence to his cousin Athalaric. He married Chrotilda, daughter of Clovis I; but his disputes with her over religion, he being an Arian and she a Catholic, brought on him the penalty of a Frankish invasion.[2]

 

The invasion was lead by Childebert I, king of Paris (who was also his brother in law, being Clotide's brother). Amalaric was defeated at Narbonne in 531 and retreated behind the walls of Barcelona, where he was assassinated by his own troops.[1]