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Saint Louis

King Louis IX of France

King Louis IX of France was kind, fair, popular, and the only French king ever to be made a saint.

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Medieval History Spotlight10

Alboin, King of the Lombards

Thursday May 16, 2013
He was a savvy political leader and a shrewd military commander, allying with neighbors of his longtime enemies, the Gepidae, to take them down, and launching a highly successful invasion of Italy. But he was a really, really bad husband. Find out what lost Alboin a shot at Best Husband of the Year for 567 in his Who's Who Profile.

6th-Century pandemic confirmed as "Plague"

Wednesday May 15, 2013

For some time now scholars have been fairly certain that the plague that struck the Eastern Roman Empire in the 6th century, known to some as Justinian's Plague, was the same disease that struck Europe in the 14th-century Black Death. Now this theory has been confirmed by DNA analysis of the remains of 6th-century plague victims, which revealed the presence of Yersinia pestis, the bacterium that manifests itself as bubonic, pneumonic, and septicemic plague.

The dreadful epidemic of the 6th century had far-reaching repercussions for Eastern Rome, although the theory that it heralded the end of the empire is not universally shared.

Find out more in the article by Mark Prigg at the Daily Mail.

Byzantine mosaics discovered in Israel

Wednesday May 15, 2013

While surveying the area in order to extend a highway, workers in southern Israel uncovered the remains of a village dating to the early Byzantine era. It soon became apparent that it was located on what had been an important travel route. And then the mosaics were uncovered. Described as "spectacular" and "stunning," the mosaics are a combination of birds, fruit, and intricate geometric patterns.

Find out more about the discovery in these articles:

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Ethelbert

Thursday May 9, 2013

He is perhaps best known for the role he played in ushering Christianity into Anglo-Saxon England, thanks in large part to his very Catholic wife. But he also wrote the earliest extant English law code. He was King Ethelbert I of Kent.

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