- of
Roman Christianity in 587.
Reccared was the
younger son of King
Leovigild by his
first wife. Like his father,
Reccared had his
capital at Toledo. The...
-
Reccared II (in Spanish,
Galician and Portuguese, Recaredo), (? –
March 621) was
Visigothic King of Hispania,
Septimania and
Galicia briefly in 621, though...
-
Reccared I (559–601) was
Visigothic King of Hispania,
Septimania and Galicia.
Reccared may also
refer to:
Reccared II,
Visigothic king (ruled in 621) Reccared...
- to bear
Reccared a son and that
Liuva II was
declared heir to the
throne after being borne by one of
Reccared’s concubines. The date of
Reccared I's marriage...
-
confession of King
Reccared was read
aloud by a notary. Its
theological precision defining Trinitarian and
Arian tenets,
establishing Reccared's newly achieved...
- twice:
first to Theodosia, who gave
birth to two sons,
Hermenegild and
Reccared I, and
after her death, to Athanagild's
widow Goiswintha.
Almost every...
-
relationships with Rome.
Liuva II, age 18,
succeeds his
father Reccared I as king of the Visigoths.
Reccared dies a
natural death at the
capital in
Toledo after...
- to the
Roman emperors.
Reccared also
fought the
Byzantines in
Hispania Baetica after they had
begun a new offensive.
Reccared's son
Liuva II
became king...
-
ordered by the
Visigothic king
Liuvigild to
honor his son
Reccared and to
serve as
Reccared's seat as co-king in the
Visigothic province of Celtiberia...
-
after him,
struck at Recopolis.
Sisebut had a son, who
succeeded him as
Reccared II on his death. Sisebut's
ecclesiastical letters survive to the present...