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Matildine

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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English

Etymology

From Matilda + -ine.

Adjective

Matildine (not comparable)

  1. Relating to Matilda of Tuscany (c. 1046 – 1115) or the lands that she ruled.
    • 1992, Malcolm Barber, The Two Cities: Medieval Europe, 1050–1320, →ISBN, page 204:
      Both parties had their own objectives: Conrad was laying claim to the Matildine lands left to Henry V []
    • 2023, John A. Dempsey, Bonizo of Sutri: Portrait in a Landscape, →ISBN, page 300:
      As quickly as the Lombard aristocracy had flocked to the emperor’s side in the spring of 1090, they fled his company in the wake of the improbable Matildine victory at Canossa.
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