Palatine County of Kefalonia and Zakynthos

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Palatine County of Kefalonia, Ithaca and Zakynthos (1388)

The Palatine County of Kefalonia (full name: Palatinate County of Kefalonia, Ithaka and Zakynthos) was a state that was under the influence of the Kingdom of Naples and later the Republic of Venice . It existed from 1185 to 1479 and after a brief Ottoman occupation again from 1500 as a Venetian colony . The curious history of the county, created by adventurers, was hardly explored for a long time.

The Ag. Georgios on Kefalonia

history

The state came in 1185, when Wilhelm II. Of Sicily the Norman pirates and Sicilian Admiral Margaritus of Brindisi with the Ionian islands belehnte that these previously the Byzantine Empire had robbed. Ten years later his son-in-law Maio I. Orsini , half crusader, half pirate from Monopoli , Apulia , took control.

Initially, the county comprised the Ionian islands of Kefalonia (Cefalonia) , Zakynthos (Zante) , Ithaka and Leukas (Leukadia) , Zakynthos was later split off as Apanage . The island of Leukas was raised to an independent duchy towards the end of the 14th century, the rulers of Kefalonia therefore also carried the title "Duke of Leukadia".

In 1207 the diocese of Kefalonia was founded in the county .

Leonardo III Tocco was expelled from the Ottomans in 1479 along with his brothers Antonio and Giovanni Tocco. They chose the Kingdom of Naples as their exile . Antonio Tocco was able to recapture the Ionian Islands with the help of Catalan mercenaries in 1481 , but was killed in the battle against the Ottomans and Venetians in 1483. The Palatinate finally fell to Venice in 1500 and remained a part of it until the end of the Venetian Republic (1797).

Count Palatine

House Orsini
House Anjou
House Tocco

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ William Miller: The Latins in the Levant : A History of Frankish Greece (1204–1566). John Murray, London 1908, p. 332
  2. ^ A b William Miller : Essays on the Latin Orient. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1921, p. 69.
  3. ^ William Miller: Essays on the Latin Orient. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1921, p. 261.
  4. ^ William Miller: Essays on the Latin Orient. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1921, p. 203.
  5. a b Di Tocco. Genetic enostrum, accessed May 19, 2020 (Italian).