- (/ˌoʊdoʊˈeɪsər/ OH-doh-AY-sər; c. 433 – 15
March 493 AD), also
spelled Odovacer or
Odovacar, was a
barbarian soldier and
statesman from the
Middle Danube who deposed...
- to
abdicate under invasions by
Goths led by
Odovacar. Upon the
sacking of Rome by
these Goths,
Odovacar declared himself King of
Italy and was able to...
-
including some Sciri, in the
Roman army in
Italy mutinied. They
acclaimed Odovacar king on 23 August,
while the
magister militum Orestes took
refuge in the...
- Ch. XII, pp. 413–421. Bury (1923), Ch. XII, pp. 413-–21. "At this time,
Odovacar overcame and
killed Odiva in Dalmatia", C****iodorus,
Chronica 1309, s.a...
-
reign of
Romulus Augustulus (475–76).
Their only
known leader was
Odoacer (
Odovacar), but he was
described as a
ruler of
several ethnic groups.
Although various...
-
inducing the
Vandal King
Gaiseric to cede to him Sicily.
Noting that "
Odovacar seized power in
August of 476,
Gaiseric died in
January 477, and the sea...
- years, the
death of Honorius, the
invasion of Attila, the war
between Odovacar and Theodoric, in his life of a
bishop who
according to his own account...
-
Stilicho against Alaric I and his
Visigoths Battle of
Verona (489)
between Odovacar and the
Ostrogoths led by
Theodoric the
Great Battle of
Verona (1799) between...
- 56–57,
argues that the
office of
comes patrimonii was
created in
Italy by
Odovacar,
continued there by the
Ostrogoths and
eventually adopted by the Visigoths...
- the loss of 120,000 books.
After the
deposition of
Romulus Augustulus by
Odovacar in 476, it
covered Zeno's
second and sole
reign down to 484. It also related...