Look up Clotilde in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Clotilde (c. 474–545) was a saint and the wife of the Frankish leader Clovis I.
Clotild, Clotilda, Clotilde, Chlotilde, or Chrotilde may also refer to:
People
- Clotilde (died 531), daughter of Clovis, wife of King Amalaric
 - Clotilde (floruit 673), founder of a monastery at Bruyères-le-Châtel
 - Clotilde (died 692), wife of King Theuderic III
 - Clotilde de Surville (15th century), French writer and poet
 - Clotilde of France (1759–1802), sister of King Louis XVI of France and wife of King Charles Emmanuel IV of Sardinia
 - Princess Clotilde of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, (1846–1927), Austrian archduchess
 - Clotilde Arias (1901–1959), Peruvian composer
 - Clotilde Cerdà (1861–1926), Spanish harpist
 - Clotilde Dissard (1873-1919), French journalist, feminist
 - Clotilde González de Fernández (1880-1935), Argentine educator, writer
 - Clotilde Tambroni (1758–1817), Italian philologist and linguist
 - Clotilde Théry, French molecular biologist
 
Other uses
- Clothilde (musician), French singer active in the late 1960s
 - Clotilde (opera), an 1815 opera by Carlo Coccia, libretto by Gaetano Rossi
 - Clotilda (slave ship), the last ship to carry slaves from Africa to the United States
 - La Clotilde, Chaco, Argentina
 - Tropical Storm Clotilda, a 1987 tropical cyclone in Réunion
 
See also
- Sainte-Clotilde (disambiguation)
 - Chrothildis (7th century), Frankish queen consort to king Theuderic III
 
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