- Source: Amalo
- Daftar Fam Nusa Tenggara Timur
- Daftar Wali Kota Kupang
- Johanis Asadoma
- Letusan Gunung Lewotobi November 2024
- Jehian Panangian Sijabat
- Wilhelmus Zakaria Johannes
- Sim Kim Toh
- Tari Flobamor
- Kabupaten Kupang
- Helmi Johannes
- Amalo
- Sarah Monette
- Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug
- The Grief of Stones
- 2014 Hotel Amalo attack
- Romansh language
- The Witness for the Dead
- Kuresoi South Constituency
- List of villages in Edo State
- Icaria
Amalo (c. 530 – 589) was a Burgundian duke in the area around Dijon. He is best known from his appearance in the works of Gregory of Tours, and was an early progenitor of the Etichonid clan, from which the Habsburgs originate.
Origin
Amalo was likely a Burgundian, judging from his name's formation from the East Germanic Amal tribe, with his family migrating as part of the expansion of Burgundian rule under King Gundobad. The Battle of Autun in 532 had ended Burgundian independence, but the family remained wealthy and influential in the area between Dijon and Besançon even under Frankish rule.
Amalo had at least one son, who is not mentioned in the contemporary sources; It therefore remains unclear whether he succeeded his father as a duke.
Amalo's grandson Amalgar, on the other hand, is well attested as Duke of Pagus Attoriensis (Burgundy), especially through the Chronicle of Fredegar and Merovingian documents, and was one of the most influential greats of the Frankish Empire of his time.
Under Eticho, Amalo's great-great-grandson and ancestor of the Ethichonid family, the noble family finally came into the hereditary possession of Alsace in the middle of the 7th century.
Representation by Gregory of Tours
Amalo is one of the few dukes among the early Merovingian rulers, here Chlothar I, whose existence is secured by contemporary sources—Amalo is mentioned several times in the Ten Books Stories of the bishop and historian Gregory of Tours.
Gregory reports that in addition to an apartment, the duke also owned at least one estate, probably near Autun, which, according to the customs of the time, was probably managed by his wife.
Gregory of Tours' description of the duke is consistently negative—the historian characterizes Amalo as a violent drunkard and libertine who did not shy away from attempting to rape a young woman. Correspondingly violent, Gregory also describes the death of Amalo: