- Epirus, and had at
least one son,
Nicholas Maliasenos.
Another possible son is a monk
called Neilos Maliasenos.
Michael I
appointed his son-in-law governor...
-
Nicholas Komnenos Angelos Doukas Bryennios Maliasenos (Gr****: Νικόλαος Κομνηνός Ἄγγελος Δούκας Βρυέννιος Μαλιασηνός) was a
Byzantine Gr****
nobleman and...
- Katzenelnbogen, the
Vlach chieftain Taronas, or the Gr****
magnate Constantine Maliasenos.
After the
capture of
Thessaly by the
Despotate of Epirus, the Vlachs...
-
Thessalian territories were
entrusted to Michael's son-in-law
Constantine Maliasenos as a
hereditary appanage. Soon after,
probably in 1213, he took Dyrrhachium...
- suzerainty, like
Stephen Gabrielopoulos of Trikala; others, however, like the
Maliasenos family around Volos,
turned to the
Catalans for support. The Gr**** rulers...
- 1256,
following a
petition of
Nicholas Maliasenos, son of the monastery's founder. Both
Constantine Maliasenos and his son
became monks, with the monastic...
-
Metropolitan of
Naupaktos John Xeros, his brother-in-law
Constantine Maliasenos, and a
certain Lambetes. The treaty,
concluded at Larissa, sti****ted...
-
perhaps even from the
local governor,
Michael I's son-in-law
Constantine Maliasenos,
allowing him to
raise an army and in a
short time
occupy Farsala, Larissa...
-
Kallikles Nicholas Kanabos Nicholas le
Maure Nikephoros Loukanes Nicholas Maliasenos Nicholas Mesarites Nicholas of
Methone Nicholas of Myra
Nicholas of Stoudios...
-
Gabrielopoulos of Trikala, a
certain Signorinos, and the Melissenos, or
rather Maliasenos,
family in the east
around Volos, emerged.
Gabrielopoulos was the most...