2009
DOI: 10.3406/pica.2009.3159
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La reconstitution du costume d’Arégonde. Nouvelles propositions

Abstract: Michel Fleury, der 1957 die Ausgrabungen von Edouard Salin unter der Basilika von Saint-Denis wieder aufgenommen hatte, entdeckte 1959 einen Sarkophag (Nr. 49) mit einer weiblichen Toten, die die außergewöhnliche Qualität ihrer Grabbeigaben und die Erhaltung der organischen Überreste ihrer Kleidung auszeichnete. Ein Goldring mit dem Namen ARN EGVNDIS und einem zentralen als REGIN E entzifferten Monogramm erlaubte die Verstorbene als Königin Arnegundis, eine von Gregor von Tours erwähnte Gemahlin Chlothars I. (… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…What we can know from the sources is that Clovis, his wife Clotilde, their daughter Clotilde and two of their grandsons were buried in this Church (GRÉGOIRE DE TOURS, 1999a, III, X, VI, 1). Importantly, Saint Geneviève's body was also buried in this Church at some point, probably after it had been buried in another important burial place in Paris (PÉRIN;RICHÉ, 1996, p. 110-112). Nevertheless, in the moment of construction of this Church the image of "New Constantine" that Clovis wanted to perpetuate overshadowed any relationship he might have had with Geneviève.…”
Section: Merovingian Paris: Clovis I Childebert I and Dagobert Imentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…What we can know from the sources is that Clovis, his wife Clotilde, their daughter Clotilde and two of their grandsons were buried in this Church (GRÉGOIRE DE TOURS, 1999a, III, X, VI, 1). Importantly, Saint Geneviève's body was also buried in this Church at some point, probably after it had been buried in another important burial place in Paris (PÉRIN;RICHÉ, 1996, p. 110-112). Nevertheless, in the moment of construction of this Church the image of "New Constantine" that Clovis wanted to perpetuate overshadowed any relationship he might have had with Geneviève.…”
Section: Merovingian Paris: Clovis I Childebert I and Dagobert Imentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to the tradition, Saint Denis was the first bishop of Paris and he was martyred in approximately 250 AD during the persecution of Christians established by Decius (GRÉGOIRE DE TOURS, 1999a, I, XXX).27 The tomb of Arnegund was found in an excavation in the second half of the twentieth century. SeePérin (2009).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%