The first marriage of despot Leonardo III Tocco

The marriage between Leonardo III — the last member of the Tocco family who ruled the Heptanese (1448-1479) — and Milica Branković, the daughter of the Serbian Despot Lazar Branković and Helen Palaiologos, concluded in Dubrovnik on May 1 1463, is an intriguing issue: it was concluded under unusual c...

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Main Author: Zečević Nada
Format: Article
Language:Bulgarian
Published: Institute for Byzantine Studies of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts 2006-01-01
Series:Zbornik Radova Vizantološkog Instituta
Online Access:http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0584-9888/2006/0584-98880643155Z.pdf
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spelling doaj-41cd189a3dc04dff978efd3a9d706d2e2020-11-24T22:35:39ZbulInstitute for Byzantine Studies of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and ArtsZbornik Radova Vizantološkog Instituta0584-98882006-01-0120064315517310.2298/ZRVI0643155ZThe first marriage of despot Leonardo III ToccoZečević NadaThe marriage between Leonardo III — the last member of the Tocco family who ruled the Heptanese (1448-1479) — and Milica Branković, the daughter of the Serbian Despot Lazar Branković and Helen Palaiologos, concluded in Dubrovnik on May 1 1463, is an intriguing issue: it was concluded under unusual circumstances, and its significance was variously presented by the couple's earlier and later contemporaries. An analysis of several historical sources (mainly those of documentary character, also some of a narrative nature) shows that, despite the belittlement of its significance made by some of the pair's contemporaries, the marriage was generally seen as a prospective alliance, designed not only to satisfy the existential needs of the couple but also to enhance the interests of various important political factors of the time: Thomas Palaiologos, the authorities of Dubrovnik, the Roman Curia and Cardinal Bessarion. As widely known, the political prospectives opened by this marriage were not fully accomplished due to the short duration of this relationship (Milica died soon after the wedding). Yet this conjugal alliance proved useful for the Tocco party even after its conclusion. In the time following Leonardo's flight from the Ottomans to Naples (after 1479), he referred to the lineage with Milica as an alliance with the Byzantine imperial family, supposedly in order to achieve certain benefices from the Italian environment where he repatriated. In parallel to the analysis of the sources about the motives and significance of the first marriage of the last Tocco despot, in this paper I also deal with several pro-sopographic and topographic details of regional importance, mentioned on the occasion of the Tocco-Brankovic wedding ceremony (e.g. Bishop of Bologna Blasius Constantii Paliki, etc). . http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0584-9888/2006/0584-98880643155Z.pdf
collection DOAJ
language Bulgarian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zečević Nada
spellingShingle Zečević Nada
The first marriage of despot Leonardo III Tocco
Zbornik Radova Vizantološkog Instituta
author_facet Zečević Nada
author_sort Zečević Nada
title The first marriage of despot Leonardo III Tocco
title_short The first marriage of despot Leonardo III Tocco
title_full The first marriage of despot Leonardo III Tocco
title_fullStr The first marriage of despot Leonardo III Tocco
title_full_unstemmed The first marriage of despot Leonardo III Tocco
title_sort first marriage of despot leonardo iii tocco
publisher Institute for Byzantine Studies of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts
series Zbornik Radova Vizantološkog Instituta
issn 0584-9888
publishDate 2006-01-01
description The marriage between Leonardo III — the last member of the Tocco family who ruled the Heptanese (1448-1479) — and Milica Branković, the daughter of the Serbian Despot Lazar Branković and Helen Palaiologos, concluded in Dubrovnik on May 1 1463, is an intriguing issue: it was concluded under unusual circumstances, and its significance was variously presented by the couple's earlier and later contemporaries. An analysis of several historical sources (mainly those of documentary character, also some of a narrative nature) shows that, despite the belittlement of its significance made by some of the pair's contemporaries, the marriage was generally seen as a prospective alliance, designed not only to satisfy the existential needs of the couple but also to enhance the interests of various important political factors of the time: Thomas Palaiologos, the authorities of Dubrovnik, the Roman Curia and Cardinal Bessarion. As widely known, the political prospectives opened by this marriage were not fully accomplished due to the short duration of this relationship (Milica died soon after the wedding). Yet this conjugal alliance proved useful for the Tocco party even after its conclusion. In the time following Leonardo's flight from the Ottomans to Naples (after 1479), he referred to the lineage with Milica as an alliance with the Byzantine imperial family, supposedly in order to achieve certain benefices from the Italian environment where he repatriated. In parallel to the analysis of the sources about the motives and significance of the first marriage of the last Tocco despot, in this paper I also deal with several pro-sopographic and topographic details of regional importance, mentioned on the occasion of the Tocco-Brankovic wedding ceremony (e.g. Bishop of Bologna Blasius Constantii Paliki, etc). .
url http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0584-9888/2006/0584-98880643155Z.pdf
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