Sir Oudart I de Renti[a] (died c. 1370), Lord of Embry, Curlu, Affringues, and Vaudringhem was a French nobleman.
He was banished from France, having been a follower of Robert de Artois and afterwards was actively involved with the English and Flemish.
[1] After being defeated, leading a Flemish army in 1347, he was pardoned by King Philip VI of France switching allegiance back to the French.
[2] Renti joined with other French nobles in an attempt in 1349 to recapture Calais by bribing Amerigo of Pavia, an Italian officer of the city garrison, to open a gate for them.
[3] Having entered the gatehouse, the drawbridge was suddenly raised, a portcullis fell in front of the French and sixty English men-at-arms surrounded them.