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Pepin   /pˈɛpɪn/   Listen
Pepin

noun
1.
King of the Franks and father of Charlemagne who defended papal interests and founded the Carolingian dynasty in 751 (714-768).  Synonyms: Pepin III, Pepin the Short.






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"Pepin" Quotes from Famous Books



... Morvan partially owed its rise to a celebrated nunnery, founded by Gerard de Roussillon, a great hero of romance and chivalry, who lived, loved, and fought under Pepin, the father of the grand Charlemagne. This nunnery, which was sacked and burnt to the ground by the Saracens, those terrible warriors of the East, was restored in the ninth century, and fortified; and as the sainted inmates were believed to have amongst their relics ...
— Le Morvan, [A District of France,] Its Wild Sports, Vineyards and Forests; with Legends, Antiquities, Rural and Local Sketches • Henri de Crignelle

... Another fine monument, by the architect Sanmicheli, to two brothers who rejoiced in the surname of Verita encrusts the front of the church of Sta. Eufemia; and in the cemetery of San Zenone are a tomb and sepulchral urn which claim that they contain the mortal remains of Pepin, king of Italy, the son of Charlemagne. Besides these, altar-tombs, pillared and canopied monuments and mortuary chapels meet the eye everywhere inside and outside of the churches. That which attracts most attention now-a-days ...
— Lippincott's Magazine, Vol. 20, August 1877 • Various

... paddles plied by sinewy arms drove the canoes up the stream. A lake {301} was passed, which later was called Lake Pepin, in honor of one of a party of their countrymen whom they met a short time afterward.[2] On the nineteenth day after their capture, the prisoners landed, along with their masters, on the spot where St. Paul ...
— French Pathfinders in North America • William Henry Johnson

... thousand miles below. The banks, rough and picturesque, rose abruptly from the water's edge, forming cliffs that overtopped the table-land beyond. These cliffs appeared in endless succession, as the boat on which I traveled steamed up the river toward St. Paul. Where the stream widened into Lake Pepin, they seemed more prominent and more precipitous than elsewhere, as the larger expanse of water was spread at their base. The promontory known as "Maiden's Rock" is the most conspicuous of all. The ...
— Camp-Fire and Cotton-Field • Thomas W. Knox

... which the Council grew, was founded in the early part of the seventh century, by Iduberge, wife of Pepin, mayor under ...
— Memories of Jane Cunningham Croly, "Jenny June" • Various



Words linked to "Pepin" :   male monarch, Rex, king, Pepin III, Carolingian, Carlovingian, Pepin the Short



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