their conquests in that


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  1. irons of Cologne, Calais, Cambrai, even beyond the Seine and
  2. as far as Le Mans, on the confines of the Britons. . . . The two
  3. principal Frankish tribes were those of the Salian Franks and the
  4. Ripuarian Franks, settled, the latter in the east of Belgica, on the
  5. banks of the Moselle and the Rhine; the former toward the West,
  6. between the Meuse, the ocean, and the Somme. Meroveus, whose
  7. name was perpetuated in his line, was one of the principal
  8. chieftains of the Salian Franks; and his son Childeric, who resided
  9. in Tournay, where his tomb was discovered in 1655, was the father
  10. of Clovis, who succeeded him in 481, and with whom really
  11. commenced the kingdom and history of France." -- Guizot. 301
  12. 3. As late as A. D. 486 there was a small portion of Gaul,
  13. embracing the cities of Rheims, Troyes, Beauvais, Amiens, and the
  14. city and diocese of Soissons, which was still fairly Roman, and was
  15. ruled by Syagrius, a Roman, under the title of Patrician, or, as
  16. some give it, king of the Romans. "The first exploit of Clovis was
  17. the defeat of Syagrius," in A. D. 486, and the reduction of the
  18. country which had acknowledged his authority. By this victory all
  19. the country of Gaul north of the Moselle, clear to the Seine, was
  20. possessed by the Franks. "The Belgic cities surrendered to the king
  21. of the Franks; and his dominions were enlarged
  22. 20
  23. toward the east by the ample diocese of Tongres, which Clovis
  24. subdued in the tenth year of his reign." -- Gibbon. 312
  25. 4. Until this time the Franks and the Alemanni had made almost
  26. equal progress in Gaul, and had made their conquests in that
  27. province, apparently in perfect national friendliness. But now both
  28. nations had become so powerful that it was impossible that two
  29. such fierce and warlike nations should subsist side by side without
  30. an appeal to arms for the decision of the question as to which
  31. should have the supremacy.
  32. 5. "From the source of the Rhine to its conflux with the Main
  33. and the Moselle, the formidable swarms of the Alemanni
  34. commanded either side of the river by the right of ancient
  35. possession, or recent victory. They had spread themselves into
  36. Gaul, over the modern provinces of Alsace and Lorraine; and their

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