EditorialCharlemagne (742-814). King of the Franks, Lombards, and Holy Roman Emperor. Charlemagne administering justice in public. Chromolithography. La Civilizacion (The Civilization), tome III, 1882.
EditorialRatchis, King of the Lombards, and King Lodvicus from the illuminated manuscript Leges Longobardorum from La Trinita della Cava, Salerno, southern Italy, 9th century. Chromolithograph from Hefner-Alteneck's "Costumes, Artworks and Appliances from the M...
EditorialCharlemagne (742-814). King of the Franks, Lombards, and Holy Roman Emperor. Charlemagne administering justice in public. Chromolithography. La Civilizacion (The Civilization), tome III, 1882.
EditorialGold solidus of Charlemagne, Frankish, 768-714. Minted in Dorestad, Netherlands. Crowned Emperor by Pope Leo III, he rarely used his imperial title on coins, describing himself rather as king of the Franks and Lombards.
EditorialCharlemagne (742-814). King of the Franks, Lombards, and Holy Roman Emperor. Charlemagne administering justice in public. Chromolithography. La Civilizacion (The Civilization), tome III, 1882.
EditorialCapital with Four Heads, ca. 1225?50, Made in Apulia, probably Troia, Italy, Italian, Limestone from Apulia, Overall: 14 1/8 x 13 x 13 in. (35.9 x 33 x 33 cm), Sculpture-Architectural, In 863 a monk named Theodosius wrote of the grandeur of Palermo, de...
EditorialDesiderata of the Lombards (c. 747-776), daughter of the king of Lombards Desiderius (710-786) and queen consort of the Franks by his marriage with Charlemagne (742-814), is comforted by her father Desideiurs after she has been repudiated by her husba...
EditorialRatchis, King of the Lombards, and King Lodvicus from the illuminated manuscript Leges Longobardorum from La Trinita della Cava, Salerno, southern Italy, 9th century. Chromolithograph from Hefner-Alteneck's "Costumes, Artworks and Appliances from the M...
EditorialGold solidus of Charlemagne, Frankish, 768-714. Minted in Dorestad, Netherlands. Crowned Emperor by Pope Leo III, he rarely used his imperial title on coins, describing himself rather as king of the Franks and Lombards.