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See also: Neustria over See also: Burgundy and See also: Austrasia
.
In 656, at the moment of his accession to power, See also: Sigebert III., the See also: king of Austrasia, had just died, and the Austrasian mayor of the palace, Grimoald, was attempting to usurp the authority
.
The
See also: great nobles, however, appealed to the king of Neustria, See also: Clovis II., and unity was re-established
.
But in spite of a very See also: firm policy See also: Ebroin was unable to maintain this unity, and while See also: Clotaire III., son of Clovis II., reigned in Neustria and Burgundy, he was obliged in 66o to give the Austrasians a See also: special king, Childeric II., See also: brother of Clotaire III., and a special mayor of the palace, Wulfoald
.
He endeavoured to maintain at any See also: rate the union of Neustria and Burgundy, but the great Burgundian nobles wished to remain See also: independent, and See also: rose under St Leger (Leodegar), See also: bishop of See also: Autun, defeated Ebroin, and interned him in the monastery of Luxeuil (670)
.
A proclamation was then issued to the effect that each See also: kingdom should keep its own See also: laws and customs, that there should be no further interchange of functionaries between the kingdoms, and that no one should again set up a tyranny like that of Ebroin
.
Soon, however, Leger was defeated by Wulfoald and the Austrasians, and was himself confined at Luxeuil in 673
.
In the same See also: year, taking See also: advantage of the general anarchy, Ebroin and Leger See also: left the cloister and soon found themselves once more face to face
.
Each looked for support to a different Merovingian king, Ebroin even proclaiming a false Merovingian as See also: sovereign
.
In this struggle Leger was vanquished; he was besieged in Autun, was forced to surrender and had his eyes put out, and, on the r 2th of See also: October 678, he was put to See also: death after undergoing prolonged tortures
.
The See also: church honours him as a
See also: saint
.
After his death Ebroin became See also: sole and absolute ruler of the Franks, imposing his authority over Burgundy and subduing the Austrasians, whom he defeated in 678 at Bois-du-See also: Fay, near See also: Laon
.
His See also: triumph, however, was See also: short-lived; he was assassinated in 681, the victim of a combined attack of his numerous enemies
.
He was a See also: man of great energy, but all his actions seem to have been dictated by no higher motives than ambition and lust of power
.
See See also: Liber historiae Francorum, edited by B Krusch, in Mon
.
Germ. kist. script. rer
.
Merov. vol. ii.; Vita sancti Leodegarii, by See also: Ursinus, a See also: monk of St Maixent (
See also: Migne, Pate
.
See also: Latina, vol. xcvi.); " Vita metrica " in Poetae See also: Latini aevi Carolini, vol. iii
.
(Mon
.
Germ. hist.) J
.
B
.
Pitra, Ilistoire de Saint Leger (See also: Paris, 1846); and J
.
See also: Friedrich, " Zur Gesch. See also: des Hausmeiers Ebroin," in the Proceedings of the See also: Academy of See also: Munich (1887, pp
.
42-61)
.
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