Odon

Odon may refer to:

  • Odon Bacqué, American politician and non-fiction writer
  • Odon of Greater Poland, duke of Greater Poland
  • Odon de Pins, Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller
  • Jorge Odón, Argentine mechanic and inventor
  • Odon (river), a river in France
  • Odon, Indiana, United States
  • The battle honour given to Commonwealth units for an action during Operation Epsom (or the First Battle of the Odon) and the Second Battle of the Odon, both of which took place on the Odon River
  • The Odón Device, invented by Jorge Odón, which is used to assist in difficult child birth.
  • See also

  • Odo (disambiguation)
  • Ödön
  • Odon (river)

    The Odon is a river in the Calvados department, in Normandy, northwestern France. It is 47 km long and is a left tributary of the Orne. The river passes through Jurques, Aunay-sur-Odon, Baron-sur-Odon, Bretteville-sur-Odon, Épinay-sur-Odon, Grainville-sur-Odon, Parfouru-sur-Odon, Tournay-sur-Odon and Tourville-sur-Odon. It flows into the Orne in Caen.

    References

  • http://www.geoportail.fr
  • The Odon at the Sandre database

  • ODON

    The Independent Operational Purpose Division or ODON, formerly called OMSDON (aka Dzerzhinsky Division) is a rapid deployment internal security division of the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR and then the Russian Federation. ODON (Russian:Одон) is an initialism for Отдельная дивизия оперативного назначения (English: Independent Operational Use Division).

    USSR

    The precursor to the ODON was the ru:1st Automobile Fighting Detachment of the VTsIK which was created in February 1918. The detachment was tasked with guarding the members of the VTsIK and the Sovnarkom and providing them with passenger cars. After relocation of the government to Moscow in March 1918, it was assigned to guarding the Moscow Kremlin as the site of the government alongside the Red Latvian Riflemen, then the "Kremlin cadets". The detachment was renamed 1st Armored Car Detachment Ya. M. Sverdlov in 1919, and was transferred to VChK in 1921. At the peak of its strength, the detachment had over 400 troops.

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