'Authari' (c.
540 –
5 September 590,
Pavia) also known as 'Agilolf,' was king of the
Lombards from
584 to his death. After his father,
Cleph, died in
574, the Lombardic nobility refused to appoint a successor, resulting in ten years interregnum known as the ''Rule of the Dukes''.
In
574 and
575 the Lombards made the blunder of invading
Provence, then part of the
kingdom of Burgundy of the
Merovingian Guntram. Guntram, allied with his nephew, the king of
Austrasia,
Childebert II, invaded Lombardy. The Austrasian army descended the valley of the
Adige and took
Trent. The
Byzantine emperor,
Tiberius II, began to negotiate an alliance with the
Franks and the Lombards, fearful of a pincer movement, elected another king.
In 584, they elected Duke Authari and ceded him not only the capital of
Pavia, but half of their ducal domains as a
demesne. He spent his entire reign in wars with Franks, Greeks, and rebels. His first major test was the quashing of the rebel duke
Droctulf of
Brescello, who had allied with the Romans and was ruling the
Po valley. Having expelled him, he spent most of the rest of his six years on the throne fighting the
exarch of Ravenna,
Smaragdus, or the Merovingian kings.
Guntram and Childebert were still not satisfied with their successes in Italy and they many times threatened invasion, following through on their threats twice. The memory of
Theudebert I of Austrasia's campaigns in Italy, the urging of Childebert's warlike mother
Brunhilda and the Byzantine emperor and exarch, as well as the wrongs done Guntram in the past undoubtedly fueled their quarrelsomeness. In
588, Authari defeated them handily, but in
590, the uncle and nephew led to armies across the Alps, respecitvely over
Mont Cenis and the
Brenner to
Milan and
Verona. Though Authari shut himself up in Pavia, the Franks accomplished little as the exarch's army did not meet them and the could not even join up with each other. Pestilence turned them around and they left the Lombards much chastened, but hardly defeated.
Authari, when not controlled by foreign armies, expanded the Lombard dominion at the expense of Byzantium. He took the fortress of
Comacchio and cut of communication between
Padua and
Ravenna. Faroald,
duke of Spoleto, captured the Ravennan seaport of Classis and utterly devastated it. Authari swept through the peninsula all the way to
Reggio, vowing to take
Calabria — a vow never to be kept by any Lombard.
Marriage
On
15 May 589, he married
Theodelinda, daughter of the
Bavarian duke
Garibald I. A
Catholic, she had great influence among the Lombards for her virtue. When Authari died in
Pavia in 590, possibly by
poison, he was succeeded as king by
Agilulf, duke of
Turin, on the advice, sought by the dukes, of Theodelinda, who married the new king.
Issue
★ Chrodaold of the Lombards, he married Daughter of Gisulf
Reference
★ ''The Royal Ancestry Bible Royal Ancestors of 300 Colonial American Families'' by Michel L. Call (chart 2078) ISBN 1-933194-22-7