'Agiprand' was briefly the
Duke of Spoleto between
742 and
744.
In late
741,
Thrasimund II refused to return to
Pope Gregory III those cities he had promised him and Gregory's successor,
Zachary, turned for support to
King Liutprand. Zachary donated a
Roman army to support the
Lombards and together they took
Spoleto and Liutprand installed his own nephew, Agiprand, as duke.
Agiprand was already the duke of
Clusium when he was invested with Spoleto. Agiprand escorted Zachary back to Rome from
Interamna and restored the cities he requested.
Agiprand's reign did not survive the death of Liutprand, when he was removed from power by Thrasimund.
Sources
★
Paul the Deacon.
''Historia Langobardorum''. Translated by William Dudley Foulke. University of Pennsylvania: 1907.
★ Hartmann, Ludo Moritz. ''Geschichte Italiens im Mittelalter''. Gotha, 1903.
★
Hodgkin, Thomas. ''Italy and her Invaders''. Clarendon Press: 1895.
★ Pabst, H. "Geschichte des langobardischen Herzogthums." ''Forschungen zur deutschen Geschichte'' Vol. II, p. 405. Gottingen, 1862.