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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Odo the Great (also called Eudes or Eudo) (died c. 735), Duke of Aquitaine, obtained this dignity by 700. His territory included the Duchy of Vasconia in the south-west of Gaul and the Duchy of Aquitaine (at that point located north-east of the river Garonne), a realm extending from the Loire to the Pyrenees, with capital in Toulouse. He retained it until his abdication in 735. His earlier life is obscure, as are his ancestry and succession. Several Dukes of Aquitaine…mehr

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Odo the Great (also called Eudes or Eudo) (died c. 735), Duke of Aquitaine, obtained this dignity by 700. His territory included the Duchy of Vasconia in the south-west of Gaul and the Duchy of Aquitaine (at that point located north-east of the river Garonne), a realm extending from the Loire to the Pyrenees, with capital in Toulouse. He retained it until his abdication in 735. His earlier life is obscure, as are his ancestry and succession. Several Dukes of Aquitaine have been named as Odo''s father: Boggis or Bertrand, to whom errant historians ascribed descent from the Merovingian Charibert II (based on the forged Charte d''Alaon), as also Duke Lupus I, who was not Merovingian at all. Odo is called the brother of Hubertus.