Overview
Ripuarian Franks, also known as Rhenish or Rhineland Franks, and also commonly referred to using the Latin plurals Ripuarii or Ribuarii, were the Franks who established themselves in and around the formerly Roman city of Cologne, on the Rhine river in what is now Germany. Until the 1950s the Ribuarii were seen as the easternmost of two distinct "sub tribes" of the Franks who ruled two large neighbouring regions in northern Gaul after the collapse of the Roman empire in the 5th century AD. According to this tradition, which continues to be influential, the Ribuarii ruled not just the Rhineland area near Cologne, but all or most of what would later become the Austrasian or Lotharingian region – stretching from.
Historical Periods
Ripuarian Franks (238–259)
238 CE – 259 CE
Area: 22,257 km²
Ripuarian Franks (260–260)
260 CE – 260 CE
Area: 25,607 km²
Ripuarian Franks (261–282)
261 CE – 282 CE
Area: 25,386 km²
Ripuarian Franks (283–286)
283 CE – 286 CE
Area: 25,607 km²
Ripuarian Franks (287–323)
287 CE – 323 CE
Area: 25,459 km²
Ripuarian Franks (324–336)
324 CE – 336 CE
Area: 25,607 km²
Ripuarian Franks (337–357)
337 CE – 357 CE
Area: 25,459 km²
Ripuarian Franks (358–366)
358 CE – 366 CE
Area: 25,517 km²
Ripuarian Franks (367–393)
367 CE – 393 CE
Area: 28,174 km²
Ripuarian Franks (394–394)
394 CE – 394 CE
Area: 28,150 km²
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