in friendship during the war with the Goths, he left
Pannonia to the Huns, who after the death of Attila
had returned to their country. Finding, on his
arrival, the province divided into so many parts,
he presently occupied Pavia, Milan, Verona, Vicenza,
the whole of Tuscany, and the greater part of Flamminia,
which is now called Romagna. These great and
rapid acquisitions made him think the conquest of
Italy already secured; he therefore gave a great feast
at Verona, and having become elevated with wine, ordered
the skull of Cunimund to be filled, and caused it
to be presented to the queen Rosamond, who sat opposite,
saying loud enough for her to hear, that upon occasion
of such great joy she should drink with her father.
These words were like a dagger to the lady’s
bosom and she resolved to have revenge. Knowing
that Helmichis, a noble Lombard, was in love with one
of her maids, she arranged with the young woman, that
Helmichis, without being acquainted with the fact,
should sleep with her instead of his mistress.
Having effected her design, Rosamond discovered herself
to Helmichis, and gave him the choice either of killing
Alboin, and taking herself and the kingdom as his
reward, or of being put to death as the ravisher of
the queen. Helmichis consented to destroy Alboin;
but after the murder, finding they could not occupy
the kingdom, and fearful that the Lombards would put
them to death for the love they bore to Alboin, they
seized the royal treasure, and fled with it to Longinus,
at Ravenna, who received them favorably.
During these troubles the emperor Justinus died, and
was succeeded by Tiberius, who, occupied in the wars
with the Parthians, could not attend to the affairs
of Italy; and this seeming to Longinus to present an
opportunity, by means of Rosamond and her wealth, of
becoming king of the Lombards and of the whole of
Italy, he communicated his design to her, persuaded
her to destroy Helmichis, and so take him for her
husband. To this end, having prepared poisoned
wine, she with her own hand presented it to Helmichis,
who complained of thirst as he came from the bath.
Having drunk half of it, he suspected the truth, from
the unusual sensation it occasioned and compelled her
to drink the remainder; so that in a few hours both
came to their end, and Longinus was deprived of the
hope of becoming king.
In the meantime the Lombards, having drawn themselves
together in Pavia, which was become the principal
seat of their empire, made Clefis their king.
He rebuilt Imola, destroyed by Narses, and occupied
Remini and almost every place up to Rome; but he died
in the course of his victories. Clefis was cruel
to such a degree, not only toward strangers, but to
his own Lombards, that these people, sickened of royal
power, did not create another king, but appointed
among themselves thirty dukes to govern the rest.
This prevented the Lombards from occupying the whole
of Italy, or of extending their dominion further than