For the later Asturian monarchs with the same name, see
Bermudo.
Veremund or Veremundus (later vernacular Vermudo or Bermudo) was a
Suevicking of Galicia around 500. His existence is conjectured on the basis of a sixth-century inscription discovered at
Salvador de Vairão. The date in the inscription is interpreted as either 485 or 535. Some scholars have dated the inscription to the eighth century, arguing that the Veremundus of the inscription is King
Bermudo I of Asturias.
Veremund's reign would fall within a period of obscurity for the region of Galicia following the death of the valuable chronicler
Hydatius (469) and the Sueves' conversion to
Arianism (466). If the king existed, he was undoubtedly an Arian.
Thompson, E. A. "The End of Roman Spain: Part III." Nottingham Mediaeval Studies, xxii (1978), pp. 3–22. Reprinted in Romans and Barbarians: The Decline of the Western Empire. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1982. pp. 161–187.
ISBN0-299-08700-X. See p. 167 for Rechimund.
Thompson, E. A. "The Conversion of the Spanish Suevi to Catholicism." Visigothic Spain: New Approaches. ed.
Edward James. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1980.
ISBN0-19-822543-1.