Odilo by his Agilolfing descent was an Alemannic nobleman, a son of Duke Gotfrid (d. 709) whom he succeeded inThurgau until 737, when with the death of Hugbert of Bavariathe older line of the dynasty became extinct and he inherited the rulership of theDuchy of Bavaria.
Odilo presided over the establishment of bishoprics in Bavaria in 739, when the four dioceses of Regensburg, Freising, Passau, and Salzburg were established by St. Boniface, who in 741 also founded theDiocese of Würzburgin adjacent Franconia. His measures sparked a revolt by Bavarian nobles and the duke temporarily had to seek refuge at the court of theFrankish Mayor of the Palace Charles Martel. In 741, Odilo married Charles Martel's daughter Hiltrud,[2] but upon the death of her father found himself at war with her brothers Carloman and Pepinthe Short.
He rebelled to support theAlamans with the support of Hunald I of Aquitaine in 742/43 against Frankish rule after persuading him to attack Neustria to burn down Chartres.[3] He was finally defeated in 743 after a battle at theriver Lech, and had to accept Frankish overlordship over Bavaria, but remained duke.[3] He further consolidated his rule, when he came to the aid of Prince Boruth of Carantania against repeated Avarincursions and was able to vassalize theSlavic principality inthe southeast.
After his death in 748, Grifo, a younger son of Charles Martel and half-brother of Odilo's widow Hiltrud, sought to establish his own rule in Bavaria and abducted Odilo's son Tassilo III. However, the next year he was defeated by Pepinthe Short who installed seven-year-old Tassilo III as Duke of Bavaria.[4]
^Couser, Johnathan (2010). "The Changing Fortunes of Early Medieval Bavaria to 907 AD". History Compass. 8 (4): 333. doi:10.1111/j.1478-0542.2009.00671.x.
^Riché, Pierre. Les Carolingiens, une famille qui fit l'Europe, Paris, Hachette, 1983 (réimpr. 1997), 490 p. (ISBN2-01-278851-3
^ abWood, Ian (1993). The Merovingian Kingdoms 450-751. Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 287–288. ISBN9780582493728.