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Fernando Palaiologos

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused withFerdinand Paleologus.
Despot of the Morea (?)
Fernando
Despot of the Morea (?)
Born15th century
Died16th century
DynastyPalaiologos (?)
FatherAndreas Palaiologos (?)

DonFernando, full name perhapsFernando Palaiologos,[a] was a 15th and 16th-century nobleman of Greek descent who lived in Italy. Fernando is known only from a 1499 letter that mentions a mission "to the Turk" and that Fernando was "son of theDespot of the Morea". Fernando's identity is otherwise unclear; he might have been a son ofAndreas Palaiologos, who claimed that position in 1499.

Biography

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Fernando is only attested on 17 July 1499, in a Venetian report that states that the Duke of Milan,Ludovico Sforza, reported that he had sent "Don Fernando, son of the Despot of the Morea, nephew of the lord Constantine, to the Turk with five horses".[1] This appears to have been a diplomatic, or possible espionage, mission.[2]Kenneth Setton believed in 1978 that "lord Costantine" wasConstantine Arianiti, governor ofMontferrat at the time.[2] In 2013, Jonathan Harris instead suggested that Fernando was a (perhaps illegitimate) son ofAndreas Palaiologos, the only claimant "Despot of the Morea" in 1499, and that "lord Constantine" was thusConstantine XI Palaiologos, Andreas's uncle.[3]

Fernando's obscurity suggests that he made relatively little impact on history. Why is not clear, he may have been of illegitimate birth or was simply unwilling to play a more prominent role.[2] Jonathan Harris claims that Fernando adopted the title of despot of the Morea after the death of Andreas Palaiologos in 1502, but provides no evidence for this claim.[2] This title is alternatively attested to have been adopted after 1502 by the genealogically unconnected Constantine Arianiti.[4]

Possible other references

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A letter from Antonio Giustiniani, Venetian ambassador to the Pope, mentions an unnamed 'despot' in command of a cavalry unit in October 1502. Jonathan Harris believes that this might be a reference to Constantine Arianiti rather than Fernando.[5]

One of Andreas's successors as claimant to the position of despot, the name of whom is not mentioned in the sources, raised problems of protocol when he in 1518 invitedPope Leo X to become thegodparent of his son Giovanni Martino Leonardo[6] (Joannes Martinus Leonhardus as written in Latin)[7] and invited ten cardinals to the baptism.[6] According to the contemporary Papalmaster of ceremonies,Paris de Grassis, the honors asked for was as if the despot believed himself to be "baptizing the Emperor of Christendom himself".[8] Kenneth Setton believed that this despot was Constantine Arianiti,[6] a sentiment also held byChristian Gottfried Hoffmann, who included Paris de Grassis's account of the affair in his workNova scriptorum ac monumentorum partim rarissimorum partim ineditorum, a collection of historical texts, in 1731.[7] Identification with Constantine is problematic since contemporary sources otherwise hold that Constantine only had a single son, namedArianitto.[9] Jonathan Harris believes that the 1518 despot could instead be Fernando.[2] The territory claimed by the 1518 despot is not specified in de Grassis's material.[7] There was another claimant despot active in Italy at the time,Carlo III Tocco, claimantdespot of Epirus, who is attested to have had a son namedGiovanni Leonardo,[10] born at some point in the 1510s.[11]

Notes

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  1. ^No contemporary source gives Fernando's last name. Given that he was described as the 'son of the Despot of the Morea', a title held by thePalaiologos dynasty, he presumably used the last namePalaiologos, rendered asPaleologo in Italian

References

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  1. ^Setton 1978, p. 513.
  2. ^abcdeHarris 2013, p. 651.
  3. ^Harris 2013, pp. 651, 653.
  4. ^Harris 2013, p. 653.
  5. ^Harris 2013, pp. 653–654.
  6. ^abcSetton 1978, p. 463.
  7. ^abcHoffmann 1731, p. 418.
  8. ^Hoffmann 1731, p. 419.
  9. ^Babinger 1962.
  10. ^Miller 1921, p. 513.
  11. ^Shamà 2013, p. 42.

Bibliography

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