ff.;
becomes king, V. iv. 10, 19;
imprisons Amalasuntha, V. iv. 13-15;
sends envoys and a letter to Justinian, V. iv. 15, 16;
receives the envoy Peter from Justinian, V. iv. 17;
opposed by Justinian, V. iv. 22;
defended by Opilio, V. iv. 25;
persuaded to kill Amalasuntha, V. iv. 26, 27;
denounced by Peter, V. iv. 30;
his excuses, V. iv. 31;
terrified by Peter, suggests an agreement with Justinian, V. vi. 1-5;
recalls Peter and consults him further, V. vi. 6-13;
his letter to Justinian, V. vi. 14-21;
reply of Justinian, V. vi. 22-25;
receives envoys from Justinian, V. vi. 26;
refuses to put his agreement into effect, V. vii. 11, 12;
makes a speech regarding rights of envoys, V. vii. 13-16;
receives a letter addressed to the Gothic nobles, V. vii. 22;
guards the envoys Peter and Athanasius, V. vii. 25;
proposes an alliance with the Franks, V. xiii. 14, 24;
kept the wives and children of the garrison of Naples, V. viii. 8;
appealed to in vain by the Neapolitans, V. ix. 1;
the story of the swine whose fortune foreshadowed the outcome of the war,
V. ix. 2-7;
dethroned by the Goths, V. xi. 1;
flees toward Ravenna, pursued by Optaris, V. xi. 6;
the cause of Optaris' hatred of him, V. xi. 7, 8;
killed on the road, V. xi. 9, xiii. 15, xxix. 6;
brother of Amalaberga, V. xiii. 2;
father of Theodegisclus, V. xi. 10;
father-in-law of Ebrimous, V. viii. 3;
father of Theodenanthe, _ibid._;
his unstable character, V. vii. 11;
accustomed to seek oracles, V. ix. 3
Theodegisclus, son of Theodatus; imprisoned by Vittigis, V. xi. 10
Theodenanthe, daughter of Theodatus, wife of Ebrimous, V. viii. 3
Theoderic,
Gothic king, patrician and ex-consul in Byzantium, V. i. 9, VI. vi. 16;
leads the Goths in rebellion, V. i. 9;
persuaded by Zeno to attack Odoacer, V. i. 10, VI. vi. 16, 23;
leads the Gothic people to Italy, V. i. 12;
not followed from Thrace by all the Goths, V. xvi. 2;
besieges Ravenna, V. i. 24;
his agreement with Odoacer, V. i. 24;
kills him, V. i. 25;
his war with the Gepaedes, V. xi. 5;
forms close alliance with the Thuringians and Visigoths, V. xii. 21, 22;
feared by the Franks, V. xii. 23;
forms an alliance with them, V. xii. 24;
craftily refrains from participation in the war against the Burgundians
and gains part of their land, V. xii. 26-28, 31, 32;
disregarded by the Franks, V. xii. 33;
appealed to by A
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