Misplaced Pages

Odo: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 14:34, 22 June 2007 editEEMIV (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers51,044 edits Other uses: rm dubious entry← Previous edit Latest revision as of 03:49, 19 October 2024 edit undoClarityfiend (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, New page reviewers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers236,543 edits Fictional characters: -two minor entries not mentioned in linked articles 
(126 intermediate revisions by 98 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{seealso|Eudes}} {{otheruses}}
'''Odo''' is a name typically associated with historical figures from the middle ages and before. Odo is etymologically related to the names Otho and Otto, and to the French name Odon, and to the Italian names Ottone and Udo; all come from a Germanic word meaning "possessor of wealth". Odo has also been used as a name for fictional characters. '''Odo''' is a name typically associated with historical figures from the ] and before. Odo is etymologically related to the names Otho and ], and to the French name Odon and modern version ], and to the Italian names ] and ]; all come from the Germanic word ''ot'' meaning "possessor of wealth".


==Historical== ==Historical==
=== Royal === === Nobility ===
* ] (a.k.a. ''Eudes'', ''Eudo'', or ''Otto'') (d.c.735), Duke of Aquitaine * ] (died c. 735), Duke of Aquitaine
* ] (d. 834) * ] (died 834)
* ] (d. 871) * ] (died 871)
* ] (held the title in 876) * ] (held the title in 876)
* ], king of the Franks (860 - 898) * ] (860–898), King of the Franks
* ], count of Toulouse (d. 918 or 919) * ] (died 918 or 919), Count of Toulouse
* ] (c. 860 - 898), also called ''Eudes'', a king of the Franks * ] (died 985), Count of Fézensac
* ] (944 – 965) * ] (950–996)
* ], Count of Fézensac from 960 * ] (died 993)
* ] (950-996) * ] (983–1037)
* ] (d. 993) * ] (died 1046)
* ] (''Eudes le Champenois'') (983 - 1037) * ] (died after 1061)
* ] (d. 1046) * ] (c. 999–1079), co-Duke of Brittany
* ] (1010 - 1093) * ] (1060–1102)
* ] (d. 1115) * ] (c. 1040–1115)
* ] (1118–1162), Duke of Brittany
* ]
* ] (died after 1180)
* ] (died in 1204)


=== Clerics ===
'''See also:'''
* ] ({{fl.|850s–860s}}, abbot and hagiographer
* ]
* ] (died 881), West Frankish abbot and bishop
* ]
* ] (c. 878–942), Roman Catholic saint
* ] ({{fl.|late 10th century}}), composer and theorist
* ] (died 958), Archbishop of Canterbury
* ] (died 1097), brother of William the Conqueror, Bishop of Bayeux and Earl of Kent
* ] (1050–1113), Benedictine monk and bishop
* ] (died 1122), saint and bishop of Urgell
* ] (died 1144), bishop of Beauvais
* ] (1110–1179), Grand Master of the Knights Templar
* ], 12th-century historian and crusader
* ] (died 1200), saint and abbot of Battle
* ] (c. 1105–1200), ] monk
* ] (c. 1190–1273), French cardinal
* ] (c. 1185–1246/47), Roman Catholic priest and fabulist
* ] (1368–1431), born Odo or Oddone Colonna
* Odo O'Driscoll, bishop of Ross, Ireland (1473-1494)


=== Clerical === ==Modern==
* ] (1886–1948), also known as Johannes Casel, German Catholic theologian and monk
* ], abbot and hagiographer (9th century)
* Saint ] (c. 878 - 942), a saint of the Roman Catholic Church * ] (born 1962), Australian author
* ] (1928–2015), German philosopher
* ] (''fl.'' late 10th century) a composer and theorist
* ] (1850–1913), Swedo-Finnish zoologist and poet
* ], Archbishop of Canterbury, England, 942-959, known as Oda the Severe
* ] (1829–1884), British diplomat
* ] (c. 1036 – 1097), Norman bishop and English earl
* ], Benedictine monk and bishop (1050 - 1113)
* ], grandmaster of the Knights Templar, 12th century
* ], historian and cruzader, 12th century
* ], French cardinal (d. 1273)
* ], priest and fabulist, 13th century
* Odo Colonna (1368 – 1431), ], also known as Oddone Colonna
* ], Bishop of ], Ireland, bishop 1482-c. 1492, also known as Hugh O'Driscoll


== Modern == ==Fictional characters==
* ], a shapeshifter in the science fiction series ''Star Trek: Deep Space Nine'' portrayed by René Auberjonois
* ] also known as ''Johannes Casel'' (1886–1948), German Catholic theologist
* Odo Proudfoot, a cousin of Bilbo Baggins from the fantasy novel '']''
* ] (b. 1962), Australian author
* Odo Stevens, an Army officer, journalist, and author from ]'s '']'' novel sequence
* ], (1829 – 1884), British diplomat
* Odo, founder of an anarchist political movement in Ursula K. Le Guin's science fiction novel '']'' and her short story "]"
* Odo or Ooth, a name allegedly corrupted into Hood in the claim that ] was Robin Hood


==Fictional== ==See also==
*]
* ], a fictional shapeshifting being in the sci-fi series ''Star Trek: Deep Space Nine''
*]
* Odo, the founder of an anarchist political movement in Ursula K. Le Guin's 1975 science-fiction novel, '']''
* Odo, a wizard about whom Rubeus Hagrid and Horace Slughorn sing a song in J. K. Rowling's ''].
* Odo, a character in the ] rough drafts. The author, J.R.R. Tolkien, hesitated to take him out because his son, Christopher Tolkien, wanted the character kept. In the end, he was deleted.


{{given name}}
==Other uses==
* ''Odo'', a genus of spiders (])
* ], a district in Ethiopia

{{disambig}}

]
]
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 03:49, 19 October 2024

For other uses, see Odo (disambiguation).

Odo is a name typically associated with historical figures from the Middle Ages and before. Odo is etymologically related to the names Otho and Otto, and to the French name Odon and modern version Eudes, and to the Italian names Ottone and Udo; all come from the Germanic word ot meaning "possessor of wealth".

Historical

Nobility

Clerics

Modern

Fictional characters

See also

Name listThis page or section lists people that share the same given name.
If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change that link to point directly to the intended article. Category: