Eylo was the first count of Álava around 868.
Eylo, Eilo, Ello, Elo or Ailo was also a women's name in 11th- and 12th-century Spain. Its origin is unknown, but it has been proposed that it is a hypocoristic of Eulalia, that it is a short form of Eloísa (Latin Aloysia, the feminin form of Louis) or that it is the same as the Gothic name Egilo/Egilona, spelled to reflect contemporary pronunciation.[1]
It may refer to:
- Eylo Alfonso (fl. 1075–1109), daughter of Count Alfonso Muñoz and wife of Count Pedro Ansúrez
- Eylo Álvarez (fl. 1114–1148), daughter of Álvar Fáñez and wife of Rodrigo Fernández de Castro
References
- ↑ Manuel Mañueco Villalobos and José Zurita Nieto (eds.), Documentos de la Iglesia Colegial de Santa María la Mayor (hoy Metropolitana) de Valladolid, siglos XI y XII (Valladolid: Imprenta Castellana, 1917), p. 4.
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