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Clodio

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Merovingian Dynasty
Kings of All the Franks
Kings of Neustria
Kings of Austrasia
Clodio
Merovech 447-458
Childeric I 458-481
Clovis I 481 - 511
   Childebert I 511-558
   Clotaire I 511-561
   Chlodomer 511-524
   Theuderic I 511-534
     Theudebert I 534-548
     Theudebald 548-555
Clotaire I
   Guntram 561-592
   Charibert I 561-567
     Chilperic I 567-584
   Sigebert I 561-575
     Childebert II 575-595
     Theudebert II 595-612
     Theuderic II 612-613
     Sigebert II 613
Clotaire II 584-629
Charibert II 629-632
Chilperic II 632
Dagobert I 632-639
   Clovis II 639-658
     Clotaire III 658-673
   Sigebert III 639-656
     Childebert the Adopted 656
     Childeric II 662-673
Childeric II 673-675
Clovis II 675-676
Dagobert II 676-679
Theuderic I 673, 679-691
Clovis III 691-695
Childebert III 695-711
Dagobert III 711-715
Chilperic II 715-720
Theoderic II 721-742
Childeric III 742-751

Clodio1 (c. 395 - 447 or 449) or, the Long-Haired or the Hairy, was the semi-legendary first Salian Frankish king of the Merovingian dynasty (426 - 447). His successor was Meroveus, who founded that dynasty. Legend has it that his father was duke Pharamond and his mother was Argotta, from Thuringia. His grandfather may have been Marcomer, a duke of the Franks.

There are basically only two sources of information for Clodio's history: the writings of Gregory of Tours and Sidonius Apollinaris.

Clodio lived in Dispargum, a name that is believed to be that of a castle, rather than a village. Around 431, he invaded the territory of Artois, but was defeated near Hesdin by Aetius, the commander of the Roman army in Gaul. However, Clodio regrouped and soon was able to seize the town Cameracum. Eventually, he occupied all the country as far as the Somme River and making Tournai the capital of the Salian Franks.

Clodio's aggressive action to seize more territory led to centuries of expansion by his successors that ultimately created what we know today as the country of France. Clodio died sometime between 447 and 449 and power passed on to Meroveus. It is not known if Meroveus was his son or another chieftain of the tribe who ascended into the leadership role.

See also


Notes

1 - There is much disagreement over this ruler's name. Variations of Clodio include Chlodio, Chlodion, Clodion, Clodius, Chlogio, and Clodian.


Adapted from the article Clodian (http://www.wikinfo.org/wiki.phtml?title=Clodian), from Wikinfo, licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.fr:Clodion nl:Chlodio hu:Chlodion sv:Chlodio

Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page) Clodio (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clodio) version history (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Clodio&action=history) GNU Free Documentation Lizenz (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License) CC-by-sa (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/)

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