In 569
Leovigild was elevated to co-rule the Visigoths in
Hispania and
Septimania with his brother
Liuva. Soon afterwards, in order to legitimize his kingship, he married
Goiswintha, widow of the previous Visigothic King Athanagild and mother of Brunhilda. Leovigild had two sons,
Hermenegild and
Reccared, from a previous marriage. About 578 Leovigild negotiated the marriage of his eldest son Hermenegild to Ingund, daughter of Brunhilda now
regent for her son Childebert. Ingund travelled from France to
Toledo through Septimania, the part of Gaul still held by the Visigoths. Septimania stretches from the eastern end of the
Pyrenees, along the
Mediterranean, to the
Rhone. As Ingund passed through the Visigothic town of
Agde she met the local Catholic bishop,
Phronimius, who warned her not to accept the 'poison' of
Arianism. In 579 Prince Hermenegild married Ingund, he being an Arian and she a Catholic. At first Ingund was warmly received by Queen Goiswintha. However, the queen was determined that Ingund should be re-baptized in the Arian faith. Ingund, still only twelve, firmly refused. According to
Gregory of Tours: "the Queen lost her temper completely" and "seized the girl by her hair and threw her to the ground: then she kicked her until she was covered with blood, had her stripped naked and ordered her to be thrown into the baptismal pool". Whether because of this fracas, or, more likely, because of Leovigild's desire to assure the succession of his sons (consistent with his previous actions to associate his sons with himself as rulers of the kingdom), he sent Hermenegild and Ingund to Seville to rule a portion of his kingdom—presumably the province of
Baetica and southern
Lusitania. ==Revolt of Hermenegild==