Otto I | |
---|---|
Count of Savoy and Margrave of Turin | |
Count of Savoy | |
Reign | 1051 or 1056 – c. 1057 or 1060 |
Predecessor | Amadeus I |
Successor | Peter I |
Spouse(s) | Adelaide of Susa |
Issue | |
Noble family | House of Savoy |
Father | Humbert I of Savoy |
Mother | Ancilla of Lenzburg |
Born | c. 1023 |
Died | c. 1057/1060 |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Otto (French: Odon, Oddon, Othon); Italian: Oddone; c. 1023 – c. 1057/1060) was count of Savoy from around 1051 until his death. Through marriage to Adelaide, the heiress of Ulric Manfred II, he also administered the march of Susa from around 1046 until his death.
He was a younger son of Humbert the White-Handed and his wife Ancilla of Lenzburg. Through Humbert's service to the German emperors, the family was granted the counties of Maurienne, Aosta and Sapaudia (Savoy), all at the expense of local bishops or archbishops. Otto inherited the family's realms after the death of his brother Amadeus c. 1051.
In 1046, he married Adelaide, heiress of the march of Susa and county of Turin. They had five children:
Through his marriage to Adelaide, Otto obtained extensive possessions in northern Italy. Thereafter, the House of Savoy concentrated their expansion efforts towards Italy instead of north of the Alps as they had done before. Savoy's lands occupied much of modern Savoy and Piedmont, although several other small states could be found between them. In the 1050s, Otto allowed coins to be minted at Aiguebelle. The archbishop of Vienne, Léger, who had sole right of minting in the region, complained to Pope Leo IX, so Otto forbade further coining at Aiguebelle.