Stephen King | King's College London | King Arthur | King | Nat King Cole | Burger King | Franks | B.B. King | The Lion King | King Lear | Martin Luther King, Jr. | King Edward VII | King Crimson | Larry King Live | King of the Hill | king | Larry King | King's College, Cambridge | King Kong | King's College | Martin Luther King | London King's Cross railway station | Carole King | King Edward's School, Birmingham | William Lyon Mackenzie King | The King and I | Martin Luther King Jr. | King's Lynn | The King of Queens | High King of Ireland |
According to Gregory of Tours (538–594), in 493 Gundobad slew his brother Chilperic II and exiled his daughter Clotilde, who was married to the Merovingian Clovis, King of the Franks, who had just conquered northern Gaul.
After he attained his majority, he commended his duchy to Pepin the Short, King of the Franks, probably at the coaxing of Pope Stephen II, and rebelled against King Desiderius, being deposed in 758 to be replaced by Arechis II.
When Clotaire then became sole king of the Franks, he left Warnachar in power in Austrasia briefly, but confirmed at Bonneuil-sur-Marne, in 617, Warnachar's function in Burgundy until his death in 626 (or 627 or 628, when he is said to have called a synod of Burgundian bishops).
These are additions made by the king of the Franks to the barbarian laws promulgated under the Merovingians, the Salic law, the Ripuarian or the Bavarian.
Pepin the Short (Pépin le Bref), eighth-century king of the Franks, son of Charles Martel, and father of Charlemagne.
Sisenand overthrew Suintila with the aid of Dagobert I, king of the Franks, to whom gothic nobles offered a 500-pound plate made of pure gold, a gift that Aetius gave to Thorismund in 451.