Theodoricus I., king of the Franks
Theodoricus (5) I. (Thierry, Theuderich), king of the Franks (511–533),
one of the four sons of Clovis, by a concubine. He was considerably older than his
three half-brothers, the sons of Clotilda, and had a grown-up son, Theodebert, when
his father died (Greg. Tur. Hist. Franc. ii. 28, iii. 1) in 511. The four
sons divided the kingdom, nominally into equal portions, but really Theodoric, owing
probably to his greater age and capacity, obtained the largest portion. His capital
was Metz, and his kingdom comprised the Ripuarian Frankish territory, Champagne,
the eastern portion of Aquitaine and the old Salian Frankish possessions to the
Kohlenwald (Richter, Annalen, p. 46). Fauriel says that besides Frankish
Germany he had so much of Gaul as lies between the Rhine and the Meuse and, as his
share of Aquitaine, the Auvergne with the Velai and Gévaudan, its dependencies,
the Limousin in part or whole, and certain other cantons of less importance (Hist.
de la Gaule Mérid. ii. 92). Theodoric died in 533. He was a strong and capable
king, but to the ferocity and lawlessness of his race he added an unscrupulous cunning
of his own (ib. iii. 7). His attitude towards the church seems to have been
one of indifference, influenced neither by fear nor superstition. Orthodoxy had
been so useful a political weapon to his father that the son was presumably a professing
Christian, though he is not mentioned among the members of Clovis's family baptized
by St. Remigius. He did not shrink from involving churches in his army's pillage
and destruction in the Auvergne (iii. 12), and though. he exalted St. Quintian,
bp. of Clermont, it was not as a priest, but as a partisan who had suffered in his
cause (iii. 2), while he bitterly persecuted Desiderius, bp. of Verdun (iii. 34).
He has the credit of reducing to writing and amending the laws of the Franks, Alamanni,
and Bavarians (Migne, Patr. Lat. lxxi. 1163).
[S.A.B.]