Fedor Ivanovich Odoevsky (d. After 1497 ) - the specific prince Odoevsky, the son of Prince Ivan Yurievich Odoevsky .
| Fedor Ivanovich Odoevsky | |
|---|---|
| Place of death | Murom |
| Occupation | prince, governor |
| Father | Ivan Yurievich Odoevsky |
After the death of Ivan Yuryevich Odoevsky, his sons Fedor, Mikhail and Vasily Krivoy shared their father’s inheritance, each received a third of the inheritance.
Fedor Ivanovich Odoevsky waged an internecine struggle for supremacy in the principality of Odoevsky with his cousins, princes Ivan, Peter and Vasily Semenovich Odoevsky, who switched to Russian service. The brothers Fyodor and Mikhail Ivanovich Odoevsky remained faithful to the Grand Duke of Lithuania, and Vasily Krivoy passed to the service of the Grand Duke of Moscow Ivan III Vasilyevich .
In 1492, princes Ivan , Vasily, and Peter Semenovichi Odoevsky , taking advantage of the absence of their cousin Fedor Ivanovich, attacked the city of Odoev , plundered the treasury and captured his mother (his aunt). Having received no help from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania , Fyodor Ivanovich Odoevsky was forced to go to Russian service. In 1494, an agreement on “eternal peace” was concluded in Moscow between the Russian state and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania , according to which most of the Verkhov principalities , including the Odoevsky principality , were included in the Grand Duchy of Moscow .
In 1497, Prince Fedor Ivanovich Odoevsky was appointed governor and governor in Murom . He died without leaving offspring.