- John of Biclaro, Biclar, or
Biclarum (c. 540 –
after 621), also
Iohannes Biclarensis, was a
Visigoth chronicler. He was born in Lusitania, in the city...
- were such only as
consorts of
their husbands. In his
Chronicon John of
Biclarum styles Goisuintha "queen" (regina)
under the
years 579 and 589. The wife...
- that the
kingdom of
Alodia was
converted around 569. However, John of
Biclarum wrote that the
kingdom of
Makuria converted to
Catholicism the same year...
-
Suebic conversion is ascribed, not to a Suebe, but to a
Visigoth by John of
Biclarum, who puts
their conversion alongside that of the Goths,
occurring under...
- one of
their own, Witteric, and
Segga was captured.
According to John of
Biclarum,
Segga had
hands cut off (the
penalty for usurpers) and was
banished to...
-
bishop of Elne, Dominus, was
mentioned in 571 in the
Chronicle of John of
Biclarum. The
bishop of Elne
attended the
Council of
Toledo in 599.
Numerous synods...
-
ascribed not to a Suebe, but to a Visigoth, by the
chronicler John of
Biclarum. He put
their conversion alongside that of the Goths,
occurring under Reccared...
-
valley and
defeated a
large army of
rustici (rustics),
according to John of
Biclarum, who may have been
referring to an army of
bandits called Bagaudae who...
-
kingdoms of
Nobatia and Alodia, but that
Makuria remained hostile. John of
Biclarum states that
Makuria then
embraced the
rival Byzantine Christianity. Archaeological...
- in
Spain was ever
greater or even
equal to it." The
chronicler John of
Biclarum, with even more excitement,
exaggerated his
figures to make Claudius, the...