[JamesLinage.FTW]
[1725539.ged]
ema p 307 "According to Gregory of Tours, [CLOVIS] was persuaded to [convert to Christianity] by his Christian wife Clotild, granddaughter of King Gundioc of Burgundy, whose son, Clodild's father, had been killed by his own brother. Clovis married her in 493, and Gregory presents his subsequent conversion as a desperate measure, taken in hopes of preventing the total annihilation of his army by the Alemanni. . . ."
ewh p 172 ". . . a Burgundian, Clotila, who was of the Roman communion. The Burgundians in general were Arians, and Clovis' choice may have been deliberate."[JamesLinage.GED]
[1725539.ged]
ema p 307 "According to Gregory of Tours, [CLOVIS] was persuaded to [convert to Christianity] by his Christian wife Clotild, granddaughter of King Gundioc of Burgundy, whose son, Clodild's father, had been killed by his own brother. Clovis married her in 493, and Gregory presents his subsequent conversion as a desperate measure, taken in hopes of preventing the total annihilation of his army by the Alemanni. . . ."
ewh p 172 ". . . a Burgundian, Clotila, who was of the Roman communion. The Burgundians in general were Arians, and Clovis' choice may have been deliberate."[Direct Linage1.FTW]
[JamesLinage.GED]
[1725539.ged]
ema p 307 "According to Gregory of Tours, [CLOVIS] was persuaded to [convert to Christianity] by his Christian wife Clotild, granddaughter of King Gundioc of Burgundy, whose son, Clodild's father, had been killed by his own brother. Clovis married her in 493, and Gregory presents his subsequent conversion as a desperate measure, taken in hopes of preventing the total annihilation of his army by the Alemanni. . . ."
ewh p 172 ". . . a Burgundian, Clotila, who was of the Roman communion. The Burgundians in general were Arians, and Clovis' choice may have been deliberate."