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193:, who suggested using Peredeo, "a very strong man", to accomplish the assassination. Peredeo refused to help, and that night mistakenly had intercourse with Rosamund, who was disguised as a servant. After learning that he had committed adultery with his king's wife, Peredeo agreed to take part in an assassination attempt in fear of the king's retribution. After the great feast, Alboin went to bed inebriated, at which point Rosamund ordered the king's sword bound to his bedpost, so that should he wake in the middle of the assassination attempt, he would be defenseless. Alboin did wake, only to find himself unarmed. He fended off his attackers temporarily with a footstool, but was killed. Due in part to the work of
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186:). However, in an attempt to secure a male heir and following the death of his first wife Clotsuinda of Frankia, Alboin took her as his wife. Alboin was noted for his cruelty towards her; his most famous act of cruelty was reported by Paulus Diaconus, who states that at a royal banquet in Verona, Alboin forced her to drink from the skull of her dead father (which he carried around his belt), inviting her "to drink merrily with her father".
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213:, who had helped them plan the murder of Alboin. At the urging of Longinus, who promised to marry her, she attempted to murder her former lover Helmichis by poisoning, handing him the drink after he had washed; however, she was instead murdered by Helmichis, who forced her to drink the poison before committing suicide by the same means.
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published from 2000 on, Rosimunda is renamed 'Rosagunde'. While the story of her marriage to Alboin is the same, in Cabot's re-telling she is granted
Genovia by the king of Italy as a reward for killing Alboin, making her the first princess of Genovia and an ancestor to the series' protagonist Mia
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Rosamund was born into a kingdom in crisis, as the Gepid people had been fighting a losing battle against the
Lombards since 546, firstly within the context of a Lombardic-East Roman alliance, and later against the Lombards and the
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Immediately afterwards, Helmichis planned to marry
Rosamund and usurp the throne by claiming kingship. However, this plan gained little support from the various duchies of the Lombard kingdom, so Rosamund, Helmichis, and
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Rosamund would inspire many later tragedies, based on her life, particularly in Italy, where the folk song "Donna
Lumbarda" was passed down orally through the generations, inspiring later renditions of the tale.
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with a large proportion of Alboin's private treasures. Rosamund and
Helmichis married in Ravenna, but were soon divided when Rosamund, in an attempt to curry favour, took as a lover Longinus, the
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would be completely subdued by a mixture of
Lombard and Avar forces, her father was decapitated and she, along with many other Gepids, was taken as a prisoner of the Lombards (see
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This hatred was what spawned the final war of the Gepids, as
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After this, she began plotting to have her husband assassinated. Thus, Rosamund met with the king's arms bearer and her lover,
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play of 1911. The conspiracy to murder Alboin also inspired the 1961/2 film
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Medieval folk tales and legends developed. The first true tragedy,
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Rosamund forced to drink from the skull of her father by
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