- of the
title is
despotess (from
Ancient Gr****: δεσπότισσα, romanized:
despótissa; Bulgarian: деспотица, romanized: despotítsa; Serbian: деспотица/despotica)...
-
landholding around Kran. As his wife,
Marina was
granted the
title of
despotissa of Kran.
Despina Marina gave
birth to a son,
called Ivan Dragushin. The...
- The
Serbian Despotate (Serbian: Српска деспотовина /
Srpska despotovina) was a
medieval Serbian state in the
first half of the 15th century.
Although the...
- Jakšić family. Her
sister Jelena Jakšić (d. after 1529) was the
titular despotissa of Serbia. Anna was
married to
prince Vasili Lvovich Glinsky [ru] (d. 1515)...
- (Serbian Cyrillic: Јелена Јакшић; c. 1475 –
after 1536) was the
titular despotissa of Serbia,
first by
marriage with
Jovan Branković, who was the titular...
-
holds a
sceptre with a cross. He
extends his hand to a woman, clad in a
despotissa's attire and
wearing a ****ing crown. The
inscription next to the figure...
- of Hungary.
Married Jelena Jakšić. She is
mentioned as "Helena, Serbiæ
despotissa" in a
charted dated to 1502. Irene:
mentioned third in the M****arelli...
- the
influential House of Jakšić, who is
mentioned as "Helena, Serbiæ
despotissa" in a
charter dated to 1502. They had 4 children, all of whom were daughters:...
- the Achaeans.
During the
Middle Ages, it was
known as the
Court of the
Despotissa due to a
royal mansion belonging to
Margarita de Lusignan,
sister of King...
-
Glinskaya and
grandmother of Tsar Ivan the
Terrible Jelena Jakšić,
titular Despotissa of Serbia, wife of
Despot Jovan Branković Şehsuvar Sultan,
Ottoman consort...