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Thrasamund

Thrasamund (450–523), King of the Vandals and Alans (496–523), was the fourth king of the north African Kingdom of the Vandals, and reigned longer than any other Vandal king in Africa other than his grandfather Genseric.

Thrasamund was the third son born to Genseric's fourth son, Gento, and became king in 496 after all of Genseric's sons and his own brother, King Gunthamund, had died. Upon Gunthamund's death, he was one of only two living grandsons of Genseric, and inherited the throne in accordance with a law enacted by his grandfather, which bestowed the kingship on the eldest male member of a deceased king's family.

Theoderic the Great married his widowed sister Amalafrida to Thrasamund, providing a dowry consisting of the promontory of Lilybaeum in Sicily, and a retinue of a thousand elite troops and five thousand armed retainers. Herwig Wolfram believes this happened in 500, "immediately after his [Theoderic] Roman tricennial". Despite this alliance, Thrasamund failed to aid Theoderic when the Byzantine Navy ravaged the coast of southern Italy, preventing him from coming to the assistance of King Alaric of the Visigoths in the Battle of Vouillé, which contributed to Alaric's defeat.

Procopius describes a battle between the Berbers of Tripoli under Cabaon and the Vandals, in which the Berbers used unusual tactics to defeat the Vandal cavalry. In the final year of his reign, the important port city of Leptis Magna was sacked by the Berbers.

Thrasamund also ended many years of Catholic persecution which had begun under his uncle Huneric, a move which improved the Vandals' relations with the Byzantine Empire. Procopius states that he was "a very special friend of the Emperor Anastasius."

Thrasamund died in 523 and was succeeded by his cousin Hilderic, the firstborn son of Huneric.

Thrasamund (disambiguation)

Thrasamund and its variants (Thrasimund, Transimund, Transamund and Transmund) are masculine given names of Germanic origin.

  • Thrasamund, king of the Vandals
  • Transamund I of Spoleto, duke from 665 to 703
  • Transamund II of Spoleto, duke on three occasions between 724 and 745
  • Transamund III of Spoleto, duke from 983 to c. 989, also count Transmund I of Chieti
  • Transmund II of Chieti, count from c. 989 to 1017
  • Transmund III of Chieti, count in the 1050s
  • Transmund IV of Chieti, count in the 1070s
  • Transmund (bishop of Valva), from 1073 to 1081