- The
margraviate or
marquisate of
Bodonitsa (also
Vodonitsa or Boudonitza; Gr****: Μαρκιωνία/Μαρκιζᾶτον τῆς Βοδονίτσας),
today Mendenitsa,
Phthiotis (180 km...
-
Margraviate of
Bodonitsa and
through marriage the
Duchy of
Athens until the
Ottoman conquest.
Under Nicholas I they took
control of
Bodonitsa in 1335. Nicholas...
-
founded after the
Fourth Crusade in 1204. They
governed the
Margraviate of
Bodonitsa from 1204 to 1358. They grew in
riches and,
after 1224,
became also the...
- co-governed her half of the
marquisate of
Bodonitsa until his death.
After Albert Pallavicini's
death in 1311,
Bodonitsa was
divided between his wife
Maria and...
- Μενδενίτσα), in the
Middle Ages
known as
Mountonitsa (Μουντονίτσα) and
Bodonitsa, Boudonitsa, or
Vodonitsa (Βοδονίτσα), is a
village in Phthiotis, Greece...
- 1354),
Marquess of
Bodonitsa Nicholas Zorzi (died 1436),
Marquess of
Bodonitsa Nicholas II
Zorzi (fl. 1410–1414),
Marquess of
Bodonitsa This disambiguation...
- they thus had use for such
border marches as the Gr****
Margraviate of
Bodonitsa (1204–1414). As
territorial borders stabilised in the late
Middle Ages...
-
northern Thrace,
until its
capture by the Bulgarians. The
Marquisate of
Bodonitsa (1204–1414), like Salona, was
originally created as a v****al
state of...
-
called Marchesopoulo by his Gr**** subjects, was the
first marquess of
Bodonitsa in
Frankish Greece from 1204 to his
death in or
shortly after 1237. He...
-
northern Thrace,
until its
capture by the Bulgarians. The
Marquisate of
Bodonitsa (1204–1414), like Salona, was
originally created as a v****al
state of...