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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HadugatoHadugato - Wikipedia

    Hadugato or Hathagat was an early Saxon leader, considered a founding father of Saxony by the tenth century. In 531, he led the Saxons to victory over the Thuringians at the battle of Burgscheidungen, "a legendary victory, and one so great that [Hadugato] appeared to [later] Saxons as an epiphany of divinity itself."

  2. Bertoldo ( Berthoald, fallecido en 622) fue el duque de los sajones durante el reinado de los reyes francos Clotario II y su hijo Dagoberto I, el último de los merovingios. 1 Despreciaba la soberanía franca y se rebeló, pero fue derrotado.

  3. Con la derrota final de los Güelfos en 1180, el ducado de Sajonia vio drásticamente reducido su territorio. Westfalia correspondió al arzobispo de Colonia, mientras que los ducados de Brunswick y Luneburgo permanecieron en manos de los Güelfos.

  4. Dukes of Saxony. The original Duchy of Saxony was the lands of the Saxon people in the north-western part of present-day Germany, namely, the modern German state of Lower Saxony as well as Westphalia and Western Saxony-Anhalt, not the modern German state of Saxony . Early dukes. Hadugato (ruled about 531) Berthoald (ruled about 627)

  5. Kingdom of Saxony. Free state of Saxony. See also. References. External links. List of rulers of Saxony. This article lists dukes, electors, and kings ruling over different territories named Saxony from the beginning of the Saxon Duchy in the 6th century to the end of the German monarchies in 1918.

  6. Los sajones se mencionan en 555, como habitantes del actual Norte de Alemania cuando murió el rey franco Teodebaldo (ca. 535-555), momento que aprovecharon para la guerra. Los sajones fueron derrotados por Clotario I, el sucesor de Teodebaldo.

  7. 21 de ene. de 2023 · Theuderic I, by Wikipedia. He was the son of Clovis I and one of his earlier wives or concubines (possibly a Franco-Rhenish Princess, Evochildis of Cologne).[1] In accordance with Salian tradition, the kingdom was divided between Clovis's four surviving sons: Childebert I in Paris, Chlodomer in Orléans, and Clothar I in Soissons.