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Odo
OF BAYEUX, French ODON DE BAYEUX, also called EARL OF KENT (b. c.
1036--d. February 1097, Palermo), half brother of William the Conqueror
and bishop of Bayeux, Normandy. He probably commissioned the famed Bayeux
tapestry, which pictures the Norman Conquest of England, for the dedication
of his cathedral (1077). Odo was the son of Herluin of Conteville by Arlette,
who had previously been the mistress of Duke Robert I of Normandy, William's
father.
Although
scandalously immoral, he was made bishop of Bayeux in 1049 by his
half brother. Odo typified Norman churchmen before the Cluniac reform.
They were essentially scions of great families placed in possession of
the church's wealth. Odo took part in the Norman invasion of England (1066)
and fought in the Battle of Hastings. The following year he was made earl
of Kent and assigned to guard Southeast England. With two other men he
ruled England during William's frequent absences from the country.
In
1082 he was imprisoned by William on a charge of raising troops without
royal permission, probably to defend the pope against the Holy Roman emperor
Henry IV. He was released on the accession of William II, in 1087, against
whom he rebelled in support of William's brother, Robert Curthose, duke
of Normandy. Though the revolt was quelled, Odo was allowed to become
Robert's aide. He was active in organising the First Crusade and was on
his way to the Holy Land when he died.
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