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".
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 === Odo the Great (died c. 735), Duke of Aquitaine Odo I, Count of Orléans (died 834) Odo I, Count of Troyes (died 871) Odo II, Count of Troyes (held the title in 876) Odo of France (860–898), King of the Franks Odo of Toulouse (died 918 or 919), Count of Toulouse Odo of Fézensac (died 985), Count of Fézensac Odo I, Count of Blois (950–996) Odo I, Margrave of the Saxon Ostmark (died 993) Odo II, Count of Blois (983–1037) Odo II, Margrave of the Saxon Ostmark (died 1046) Odo, Count of Dammartin (died after 1061) Odo, Count of Penthièvre (c. 999–1079), co-Duke of Brittany Odo I, Duke of Burgundy (1060–1102) Odo, Count of Champagne (c. 1040–1115) Odo II, Duke of Burgundy (1118–1162), Duke of Brittany Odo I, Viscount of Porhoët Odo II, Viscount of Porhoët (died after 1180) Odo II of Champlitte (died in 1204)
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).