- Earl
Ottir (Old Norse: Óttar jarl;
Medieval Latin: Oter comes, lit. 'Count Oter'; died 918), also
known as
Ottir the
Black (Old Irish:
Ottir Dub), was...
- date
claims the
Cotters are
descendants of Óttar of
Dublin (Son of Mac
Ottir), who was King of
Dublin from 1142 to 1148,
through his son
Thorfin and...
-
sometimes known as Óttarr
Ottar from Hålogaland, the
Viking adventurer Ottir Iarla (Earl
Ottir),
historical Norse-Gael of
Waterford and
probable settler of Cork...
- were led by
Ottir Iarla.
Ragnall ua Ímair then
installed himself over them in 917,
however leaving a year
later for Britain, with
Ottir, and presumably...
- name Cotter,
local to
County Cork,
derives from the
Norse personal name
Ottir. The name
Reynolds is an
Anglicization of the
Irish Mac Raghnaill, itself...
-
Irish record of the name
occurs in 1142, when Mac Mic
Ottir .i.
Ottir ("the son of Mac
Ottir, i.e.
Ottir") from the Hebrides, is
recorded to have ****umed the...
-
Chinese noblewoman (b. 865)
Miyoshi Kiyotsura, ****anese
scholar (b. 847)
Ottir (the Black),
Norse Viking chieftain Tan Quanbo,
Chinese warlord (approximate...
- re-established
themselves in
Ireland at
Waterford in 914, led at
first by
Ottir Iarla (Jarl Ottar)
until 917, and
after that by
Ragnall ua Ímair and the...
- 47A, Site 397):
Sedimentary Geology, v. 112, no. 1–2, p. 137–156, Olavsd�
ottir, J., M. S. Andersen, and L. O. Boldreel, 2015,
Reservoir quality of intrabasalt...
-
records the
early port
being plundered by
Danes led by Earl
Ottir and a 'Hroald' (possibly
Ottir's king Ragnall) in 987 and 997.
Watchet is
believed to be...