Odo, Count of Nevers
Odo of Burgundy, in French Eudes de Bourgogne (1230 – 4 August 1266), was the Count of Nevers and Auxerre and the eldest son and heir of Hugh IV, Duke of Burgundy. His mother was Yolande of Dreux.[1]
Odo, Count of Nevers | |
---|---|
Seal of Odo of Nevers | |
Born | 1230 |
Died | 1266 Acre |
Noble family | House of Burgundy |
Spouse(s) | Maud of Dampierre |
Issue | |
Father | Hugh IV, Duke of Burgundy |
Mother | Yolande of Dreux |
In 1265, Odo became one of the last European barons to lead a crusading force to the Holy Land. Among his fifty knights was Erard of Valery. He defended Acre when Sultan Baybars I harassed it on 1 June 1266 in advance of his besieging Safad. He died at Acre on 4 August and was buried in the church of Saint Nicholas. He left all his wealth to pay his followers and to endow hospitals and religious institutions. He was described by the Templar of Tyre as a "holy man", and his tomb attracted veneration. Within a year of his death, the poet Rutebeuf wrote a Complainte du comte Eudes de Nevers, a lament for a valiant knight and also for the city that lost its defender.[2]
Burgundy passed to Odo's brother, Robert.
Marriage and children
Odo married Maud of Dampierre and had three daughters, all of whom became rulers of their parents' counties:
- Yolande (1247–1280), married (1) Jean-Tristan, son of King Louis IX of France, and (2) Count Robert III of Flanders[1]
- Margaret, Countess of Tonnerre (1250–1308), married King Charles I of Naples
- Adelaide, Countess of Auxerre (1251–1290)
References
- Michelle Bubenicek, Quand les femmes gouvernent: droit et politique au XIVe siècle:Yolande de Flandre, Droit et politique au XIV siecle, (Ecole des Chartes, 2002), 54.
- Jacques Paviot, "Odo of Burgundy (d. 1266)", in Alan V. Murray (ed.), The Crusades: An Encyclopedia (ABC-CLIO, 2006), Vol. 2, p. 897.
See also
- Dukes of Burgundy family tree