Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q2629006> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 48 of
48
with 100 triples per page.
- Q2629006 subject Q6547433.
- Q2629006 subject Q6897149.
- Q2629006 abstract "Langobardia Minor was the name that, in early Middle Ages, was given to the Lombard dominion in central-southern Italy, corresponding to the duchies of Spoleto and Benevento. After the conquest of the Lombard kingdom by Charlemagne in 774, remained under Lombard control.Once in Italy through the Friuli in 568, the Lombards tore from the Byzantines a large part of land south of the Alps, but didn't constitute, at least initially, a uniform and contiguous domain. The submissive lands were grouped, in the terminology of the time, in two important areas: Langobardia Maior, from the Alps to today's Tuscany, and Langobardia Minor which included the possessions south of the Byzantine territories (which in that last part of the 6th century stretched from Rome to Ravenna through current Umbria and Marche). The Exarchate of Ravenna was connected to Rome through the "Byzantine corridor", which went through Orvieto, Chiusi and Perugia and separated Langobardia Minor from the Maior.While Langobardia Maior was fragmented and changing in many duchies and Gastalds, the Minor maintained for the duration of the Lombard kingdom (568-774) a remarkable institutional stability, remaining divided into the two duchies of Spoleto and Benevento. They were formed immediately after Lombard penetration, in the seventies of the 6th century, and the first dukes were Faroald in Spoleto and Zotto in Benevento. In the beginning they included geographically only the inland areas, leaving the Byzantines control of the coastal areas; only later (particularly at the reign of Agilulf 591-616) Lombard possessions were extended also to the coasts. So became subject to the two duchies the entire Adriatic coast between Byzantine strongholds of Ancona in the north and Otranto in the south; the Ionian and the Tyrrhenian, however, only partially fell under the authority of the duke of Benevento, which was never able to permanently occupy Naples, the Salento and the tip of Calabria (south of Cosenza and Crotone), and of course, Rome and its suburbs.".
- Q2629006 thumbnail Agilulfs_Italy.svg?width=300.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q12544.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q1273.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q1279.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q1280.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q1286.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q130900.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q13364.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q13437.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q1355160.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q13619.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q13924.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q1458.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q1495409.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q160424.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q160570.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q202763.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q20571.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q220.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q226984.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q2634.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q267816.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q2713566.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q2829270.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q3044.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q315276.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q3415.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q3437.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q3715809.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q38.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q4117204.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q465331.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q510874.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q52174.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q541.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q6547433.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q6681.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q6897149.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q694740.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q735628.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q854415.
- Q2629006 wikiPageWikiLink Q91185.
- Q2629006 comment "Langobardia Minor was the name that, in early Middle Ages, was given to the Lombard dominion in central-southern Italy, corresponding to the duchies of Spoleto and Benevento. After the conquest of the Lombard kingdom by Charlemagne in 774, remained under Lombard control.Once in Italy through the Friuli in 568, the Lombards tore from the Byzantines a large part of land south of the Alps, but didn't constitute, at least initially, a uniform and contiguous domain.".
- Q2629006 label "Langobardia Minor".
- Q2629006 depiction Agilulfs_Italy.svg.