Marco Barbarigo di Croia

Marco Barbarigo (fl. 1388–d. 1428)[a] was a Venetian nobleman, who married Helena Thopia and thus inherited the rule of Croia (Krujë) (in modern Albania), which he initially held under Venetian and later, after quarrelling with Venetian noblemen, Ottoman suzerainty, until in late 1394 when he was defeated by Venetian subject Niketa Thopia (his wife's cousin) and forced into exile at the court of Đurađ II Balšić. He was appointed the Venetian governor (as "count" or "captain") of Cattaro (Kotor) in ca. 1422.

Marco Barbarigo
Venetian "count" or "captain"
Governor of Croia (Venetian)
Governor of Croia (Ottoman)
Governor of Cattaro (Venetian)
BornRepublic of Venice
Died1428
Republic of Venice
Noble familyBarbarigo
SpouseHelena Thopia (1380s–94)
Occupation1388–93: Venetian subject
1393–94: Ottoman subject
1422–28: Venetian subject

Life

Barbarigo was a Venetian businessman.[1] He married Helena Thopia,[2] the daughter of Albanian magnate Karl Topia, who had ruled as "Prince of Albania" from Durazzo and had since 1386 served as a Venetian vassal. After Karl's death in 1388, Barbarigo inherited the castle of Croia and the surrounding region through his wife. He ruled from the strong fortress of Croia and held the possessions under Venetian suzerainty.[3]

After the Ottomans had occupied Scutari (by early 1393), they defeated Demetrius Jonima, who then set up a meeting between Barbarigo and the Ottomans.[3] As Barbarigo had recently quarrelled with the Venetians, and likely felt an Ottoman threat, he accepted Ottoman suzerainty.[3] He had a meeting with Beyazid.[4] He retained Croia and his lands which stretched to Durazzo, and began to plunder Venetian holdings in the vicinity of Durazzo.[3] Venice ordered Niketa Thopia, the governor of Durazzo, to answer the plundering; Thopia heavily defeated Barbarigo.[3] The Ottomans, presumably disappointed, installed their vassal Konstantin Balšić as governor of Croia; Barbarigo was exiled, taking refuge at the court of Đurađ II Balšić,[3] who at the time was also an Ottoman subject. Konstantin soon married Barbarigo's wife Helena, who had the hereditary rights to Croia.[3] In chronicles, Helena is said to have been unfaithful, transferring Croia to her lover, Konstantin.[5] Đurađ II had declined an offer of 1,000 ducats to give up Barbarigo to the Venetians.[6] Afterwards, Đurađ II broke ties with the Ottomans and seized rival Konstantin's stronghold Dagno in 1395, with Venetian assistance.[7]

In 1400, Barbarigo attacked Venetian merchant Phillip Barelli on the Cape of Rodon, and wed his wife, after which there is no more mention of Barelli in history.[8]

Around 1422, he was appointed overseer of Cattaro (Kotor).[9] He succeeded Antonio Boccole.[10] Stefan Lazarević, the ruler of the Serbian Despotate, had been ceded Zeta from his nephew Balša III (Đurađ II's successor) in April 1421, but the Venetians did not recognize him, holding on to the occupied Zetan coast (including the Bay of Kotor) and Bojana, including Drivast recaptured by them after Balša's death.[11] The Venetians had no intention to cede Balša's former possessions to Despot Stefan and even requested Ottoman support in case of an attack.[12] The Second Scutari War followed, which ended inconclusive in August 1423 with the Treaty of Sveti Srdj; in it, Kotor accepted Venetian suzerainty.

He was succeeded as governor of Cattaro by Stefano Querini,[10] who held office until 1425.[13] Marco Barbarigo died in 1428.[14]

Annotations

  1. ^
    His name in Serbo-Croatian historiography has been spelled "Marko Barbadigo" (Serbian Cyrillic: Марко Барбадиго).[15][16][17]

References

  1. Schmitt 2001, p. 196
  2. Agostino Pertusi; Fondazione "Giorgio Cini". (1973). Venezia e il Levante fino al secolo XV: Storia, diritto, economia. 2 v. L. S. Olschki. Elena Thopia col marito Marco Barbarigo (un nobile veneto esule per debiti) presentano i loro « capitoli » a Venezia in d. 1393 VIlI 28 (Mix 42, 128 (127) ; A 514), riconoscono l'alta signoria veneta e ottengono la vicaria di Croia in d. 1393 VIlI ...
  3. John V. A. Fine; John Van Antwerp Fine (1994). The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest. University of Michigan Press. p. 419. ISBN 0-472-08260-4. Mark Barbadigo
  4. Univerzitet u Beogradu. Filozofski fakultet (1968). Zbornik Filozofskog fakulteta. Vol. 10. Naučno delo. Господар Кроје Мле- чанин Марко Барбадиго, муж Јелене, кћгри Карла Топије, отишао је 1394. год. турском команданту Пашајиту и признао врховну турску власт:
  5. Tanya Popovic (1988). Prince Marko: The Hero of South Slavic Epics. Syracuse University Press. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-8156-2444-8.
  6. Dragutin Kostić (1937). Tumačenja druge knjige srpskih narodnih pjesama Vuka St. Karadžića: dodatak četvrtom državnom izdanju. Državna Štamparija. 1394, претрпео је и савременик, сусед и имењак Марков, Марко Барбадиго млетачки племић и одметник (допао и ропства у Ђурђа Страцимировића-Балшића, који га није хтео издати Млецима за уцену од 1000 дуката);
  7. Anamali, Skënder and Prifti, Kristaq. Historia e popullit shqiptar në katër vëllime. Botimet Toena, 2002, ISBN 99927-1-622-3 pp. 251-252
  8. Schmitt 2001, p. 197
  9. Viktor Novak (2003). Revue historique. Vol. 49. p. 69. Први од њих био је Франческо Павони, дота- дашњи ректор парохије Св. Аполинара у Млецима. Бискуп је постао у је- сен 1422. године, у време кад је за ванредног провизора изабран Марко Барбадиго.
  10. Vincenzo Padovan (1882). La nummografia veneziana: sommario documentato. Vol. 25. Tip. del Commercio di M. Visentini. p. 243.
  11. Fine 1994, p. 516
  12. Glas, Том 338. Belgrade: Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. 1983. p. 67. Retrieved August 2, 2012.
  13. Schmitt 2001, p. 373
  14. Adriano Cappelli (1998). Cronologia, cronografia e calendario perpetuo: dal principio dell'era cristiana ai nostri giorni. HOEPLI EDITORE. pp. 526–. ISBN 978-88-203-2502-2. col marito Marco Barbarigo (t 1428)
  15. Novak 2003.
  16. Filozofski fakultet 1968.
  17. Kostić 1937.

Sources

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