Lothair (Latin: Lotharius; German: Lothar; French: Lothaire) is a Germanic given name, derived from the older form Clotaire (Chlotharius). == People ==
Lothair (Latin: Lotharius; German: Lothar; French: Lothaire) is a Germanic given name, derived from the older form Clotaire (Chlotharius). == People == Lothair I (795–855), King of Italy and Holy Roman Emperor Lothair I, Margrave of the Nordmark (940–1003) Lothair II of Lotharingia (825–869), a king, son of Emperor Lothair I Lothair II of Italy (died 950), a king Lothair III, Holy Roman Emperor (1075–1137), also called Lothair II Lothair of France (941–986), sometimes called Lothair II Lothair the Lame (died 865), Abbot of Saint-Germain-des-Prés Lothair Udo I, Count of Stade (950–994) Lothair Udo I, Margrave of the Nordmark (994–1057) Lothair Udo II, Margrave of the Nordmark (1025–1082) Lothair Udo III, Margrave of the Nordmark (1070–1106)
== Other uses == Lothair, Georgia, in the United States Lothair, Montana, in the United States Lothair, Kentucky, in the United States Lothair, South Africa, a town in Mpumalanga Lothair (novel), by Benjamin Disraeli Lothair (clipper), a ship built in Britain in 1870 M. Lothaire, pseudonym of a group of mathematicians Cross of Lothair Lothair Crystal
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).