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Frankish$505517$ - перевод на испанский

FRANKISH KINGDOM FROM 481 TO 843
Frankish realm; Frankish Kingdom; Frankish Kingdoms; Frankish Realm; Frankish realms; Kingdom of the Franks; Empire of the Franks; Frankish kingdom; Frankish kingdoms; Frankenreich; Regnum Francorum; Frankish Empire; Kingdom of Franks; Frankish empire; Frankish State; Kingdom of Francia; Frankish Church; Frankish Christianity; Francland; Division of the Frankish Empire; Empire of Francia; Frankish state; Frankish Europe
  • Clovis]] with [[Clotilde]] presiding, ''[[Grandes Chroniques de Saint-Denis]]'' (Bibliothèque municipale de Toulouse).
  • Clovis]]'s death (511). The kingdoms were not geographic unities because they were formed in an attempt to create equal-sized fiscs. The discrepancy in size reveals the concentration of Roman fiscal lands.
  • Burgundy]] and [[Austrasia]].
  • Gaul as a result of the [[Treaty of Andelot]] (587). The treaty followed the division of [[Charibert I]]'s kingdom between the three surviving brothers. It gave [[Guntram]]'s portion with [[Poitou]] and [[Touraine]] to [[Childebert II]] in exchange for extensive lands in southern and central [[Aquitaine]].
  • Francia and neighbouring [[Slavic peoples]] c. 650
  • [[Gaul]] at the death of [[Pepin of Heristal]] (714). At this time the vast [[duchy of Aquitaine]] (yellow) was not a part of the Frankish kingdom.
  • The Frankish Kingdom of [[Aquitaine]] (628). The capital of Aquitaine was [[Toulouse]]. It included [[Gascony]] and was the basis of the later [[Duchy of Aquitaine]].
  • Charlemagne's Empire]] (843/870).
  • The growth of Frankish power, 481–814, showing Francia as it originally was after the crumbling of the [[Western Roman Empire]]. It was located northeasterly of that during the time of [[Constantine the Great]].
  • [[East Francia]] or the East Frankish Kingdom: [[Louis the German]], King of the East Franks.}}
  • Burgundian kingdom]] and the province of [[Septimania]] remained unconquered at his death (511).

Frankish      
n. antigua lengua germánica hablada por los francos
Carl the Great         
  • Benevento]]
  • Charlemagne's chapel]] at [[Aachen Cathedral]]
  • [[Proserpina sarcophagus]] of Charlemagne in the [[Aachen Cathedral Treasury]]
  • The [[Throne of Charlemagne]] and the subsequent German Kings in [[Aachen Cathedral]], Germany
  • [[Moorish]] [[Hispania]] in 732
  • skull cap]], is located at [[Aachen Cathedral Treasury]], and can be regarded as the most famous depiction of the ruler.
  • Charlemagne receiving the submission of [[Widukind]] at [[Paderborn]] in 785, painted c. 1840 by [[Ary Scheffer]]
  • Equestrian statue of Charlemagne]]'' by [[Agostino Cornacchini]] (1725), [[St. Peter's Basilica]], [[Vatican City]].
  • The Frankish king Charlemagne was a devout Christian and maintained a close relationship with the papacy throughout his life. In 772, when [[Pope Adrian I]] was threatened by invaders, the king rushed to Rome to provide assistance. Shown here, the pope asks Charlemagne for help at a meeting near Rome.
  • frameless
  • chignon]] hairstyle.
  • Denier from the era of Charlemagne, [[Tours]], 793–812
  • Charlemagne instructing his son [[Louis the Pious]]
  • Later depiction of Charlemagne in the [[Bibliothèque Nationale de France]]
  • equestrian statuette]] thought to represent Charlemagne (from [[Metz Cathedral]], now in the Louvre)
  • Page from the [[Lorsch Gospels]] of Charlemagne's reign
  • Coronation of an idealised king, depicted in the Sacramentary of [[Charles the Bald]] (about 870)
  • ''Emperor Charlemagne'', by [[Albrecht Dürer]], 1511–1513, [[Germanisches Nationalmuseum]]
  • Europe at the death of the Charlemagne 814.
  • Francia, early 8th century}}
  • Charlemagne's additions to the [[Frankish Kingdom]]
  • [[Harun al-Rashid]] receiving a delegation of Charlemagne in [[Baghdad]], by Julius Köckert (1864)
  • One of a chain of [[Middle Welsh]] legends about Charlemagne: ''Ystorya de Carolo Magno'' from the ''[[Red Book of Hergest]]'' ([[Jesus College, Oxford]], MS 111), 14th century
  • Coronation of Charlemagne, drawing by [[Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld]]
  • [[Pope Leo III]], crowning Charlemagne from ''Chroniques de France ou de Saint Denis'', vol. 1; France, second quarter of 14th century.
  • Charlemagne (left) and [[Pepin the Hunchback]] (10th-century copy of 9th-century original)
  • Karoli gloriosissimi regis}}
  • Frederick II's]] gold and silver casket for Charlemagne, the [[Karlsschrein]]
  • Imperial Coronation of Charlemagne, by [[Friedrich Kaulbach]], 1861
  • The privileges of Charlemagne at the [[Modena Cathedral]] (containing the [[monogram]] of Charlemagne), dated 782
  • ''[[The Coronation of Charlemagne]]'', by assistants of [[Raphael]], c. 1516–1517
  • A portion of the 814 death [[shroud]] of Charlemagne. It represents a [[quadriga]] and was manufactured in [[Constantinople]]. [[Musée de Cluny]], Paris.
  • 13th-century stained glass depiction of Charlemagne, [[Strasbourg Cathedral]]
KING OF FRANKS, REGARDED AS THE FIRST HOLY ROMAN EMPEROR (747–814)
Charlimagne; Charlimaine; Charlamaine; Charlemaine; Charles the Great; Karl der Grosse; Charles I, Holy Roman Emperor; Charles I of France; Charlemange; Carolus Magnus; Emperor Charles I; Carl the Great; Karl der große; Charlesmagne; Charlemagne the great; December 25, 800 AD; Karl der Große; Carlo the Great; Regina (concubine of Charlemagne); Emperor of the West and Frankish king Charles I; Gisela, daugher of Charlemagne; Charlegmagne; Emperor Charlemagne; Charlemegne; Charlemagn; Karl der grosse; Karl I der Große; Karolus Magnus; Charlmagne; Frankish king Charles I; Charles I of Aquitaine; Carlomagno; Carolus I; Saint Charles the Great; Charlemain; Karl I, Holy Roman Emperor; Karl the Great; Descent from Charlemagne; Charles le Magne; Charlemagne to the mughals; Pater Europae; Charlemange, Holy Roman Emperor; Charlemagne in Spain; 800 in Germany; Karel de Grote; Karel the Great; CAROLVS MAGNVS; Blessed Charlemagne; Regina (concubine); Madelgard
Carlo Magno (rey francés)

Определение

Frankish
·adj Like, or pertaining to, the Franks.

Википедия

Francia

Francia, also called the Kingdom of the Franks (Latin: Regnum Francorum), Frankish Kingdom, Frankland or Frankish Empire (Latin: Imperium Francorum), was the largest post-Roman barbarian kingdom in Western Europe. It was ruled by the Frankish Merovingian and Carolingian dynasties during the Early Middle Ages. Francia was among the last surviving Germanic kingdoms from the Migration Period era.

The original core Frankish territories inside the former Western Roman Empire were close to the Rhine and Meuse rivers in the north, but franks such as Chlodio and Childeric I expanded Frankish rule into what is now northern France. A single kingdom uniting all Franks was founded by Clovis I, the son of Childeric, who was crowned King of the Franks in 496. He founded the Merovingian dynasty, which was eventually replaced by the Carolingian dynasty. Under the nearly continuous campaigns of Pepin of Herstal, Charles Martel, Pepin the Short, Charlemagne, and Louis the Pious—father, son, grandson, great-grandson and great-great-grandson—the greatest expansion of the Frankish empire was secured by the early 9th century, and is by this point referred to as the Carolingian Empire.

During the Merovingian and Carolingian dynasties the Frankish realm was one large polity, generally subdivided into several smaller kingdoms ruled by different members of the ruling dynasties. These coordinated but also regularly came into conflict with each other. The old Frankish lands, for example, were initially contained within the kingdom of Austrasia, centred on the Rhine and Meuse, roughly corresponding to later Lower Lotharingia. The Gallo-Roman territory to its south and west was called Neustria. The exact borders and number of these subkingdoms varied over time, until a basic split between eastern and western domains became persistent. After various treaties and conflicts in the late-9th and early-10th centuries, West Francia continued as the medieval Kingdom of France, while East Francia and Lotharingia came under the control of the non-Frankish Ottonian dynasty, and became the core of the medieval Holy Roman Empire.