Jump to content

Irene Kantakouzene: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
 
(113 intermediate revisions by 61 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Wife of Serbian despot}}
{{Infobox royalty
{{Infobox royalty
| consort = yes
| consort = yes
| name = Irene Kantakouzene Branković
| name = Irene Kantakouzene
| image = Irene Kantakouzene, Esphigmenou charter (1429).jpg
| image =
| imgw = 250px
| image_size = 250px
| caption =
| caption =
| title =
| title =
| succession = Despotess of Serbia
| succession = Despotess of Serbia
| reign = 19 July 1427 – 24 December 1456
| reign = 1414-
| coronation =
| coronation =
| spouses = [[Đurađ Branković]]
| spouses = {{marriage|[[Đurađ Branković]]|1414|1456|end=his death}}
| spouse-type = Spouses
| spouse-type = Spouses
| issue = Todor Branković (?)<br>[[Grgur Branković]]<br>[[Mara Branković]]<br>[[Stefan Branković]]<br>[[Kantakuzina Katarina Branković|Katarina, Countess of Celje]]<br>[[Lazar Branković]]
| issue = [[Lazar Branković]]
| house = [[Kantakouzene]][[House of Branković|Branković]]
| house = [[Kantakouzenos]] (birth)<br/>[[Branković]] (marriage)
| father = [[Theodore Kantakouzenos]]
| father = [[Theodore Kantakouzenos]]
| mother = [[Euphrosyne Palaiologina]]
| mother = Helena Ouresina Doukaina
| date of birth = c. 1400
| birth_date = {{circa|1400}}
| place of birth = [[Constantinople]]
| birth_place = [[Constantinople]], [[Byzantine Empire]]<br />(modern-day [[Istanbul]], [[Turkey]])
| death_date = 3 May 1457
| date of death =
| death_place = [[Rudnik (mountain)|Rudnik]], [[Gornji Milanovac]], [[Serbian Despotate]]<br />(modern-day [[Serbia]])
| place of death =
| place of burial =}}
| place of burial =
}}


'''Irene Kantakouzene''' ({{lang-el|Ειρήνη Καντακουζηνή}}; {{lang-sr|Јерина Бранковић, '''Jerina Branković'''}}, c. 1400 &ndash; May 2/May 3, 1457 at [[Rudnik]]) was the wife of [[Serbian Despot]] [[Đurađ Branković]]. In Serbian folk legends, she is the founder of many fortresses in Serbia.
'''Irene Kantakouzene''' ({{langx|el|Ειρήνη Καντακουζηνή}}, ''Eiréne Kantakouzené'', <small>modern pronunciation</small> ''Iríni Kantakouziní'' {{IPA-el|iriˈni kantakusini'|}}, {{langx|sr|Ирина Кантакузин}} / ''Irina Kantakuzin''; {{circa|1400}} 3 May 1457), known simply as '''Despotess Jerina'''{{Cref2|a}} ({{langx|sr|деспотица Јерина}} / ''despotica Jerina''), was the wife of [[Serbian Despotate|Serbian Despot]] [[Đurađ Branković]]. In Serbian folk legends, she is the founder of many fortresses in Serbia.


==Family==
== Life ==
Although the [[Smederevo Fortress]] was the work of Đurađ Branković (completed in 1430), Irene apparently had a role in its construction; one of its [[tower]]s is known as "Jerina [Irene]'s Tower" ({{langx|sr|Јеринина кула}} / ''Jerinina kula''), and she is blamed for causing hardship on the inhabitants of the countryside by levying taxes and recruiting forced labor for building the fortress.<ref>Donald M. Nicol, ''The Byzantine Family of Kantakouzenos (Cantacuzenus) ca. 1100-1460: a Genealogical and Prosopographical Study'' (Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks, 1968), p. 185</ref> The fortress traded hands between the Serbs and the Ottomans over the following years until it fell on 20 June 1459, more than two years after Branković, and then Irene, had died.<ref name=Nicol-186>Nicol, ''Byzantine Family'', p. 186</ref>


Nicols describes the circumstances of Irene's death as "melancholy". According to the account of historian [[Michael Critobulus]], upon the death of Đurađ Branković, his youngest son [[Lazar Branković|Lazar]] became Despot under her regency. However Lazar swiftly deprived her of all authority and treated her so badly that she tried to escape to the court of Sultan [[Mehmet II]] with her daughter [[Mara Branković|Mara]] and her son [[Grgur Branković|Grgur (Gregory)]]. Lazar pursued them, and captured Irene although Mara and Gregory successfully escaped. Irene soon became ill and died on the night of 2–3 May at [[Rudnik (mountain)|Rudnik]], where she was buried. [[Theodore Spandounes]], a 16th-century historian records the accusation that Lazar poisoned her.<ref name=Nicol-186/>
Irene and her relations are named in "Dell'Imperadori Constantinopolitani", a manuscript held in the [[Vatican Library]]. The document is also known as the "Massarelli manuscript" because it was found in the papers of [[Angelo Massarelli]] (1510 - 1566).<ref> [http://newsgroups.derkeiler.com/Archive/Soc/soc.genealogy.medieval/2008-03/msg00384.html Tony Hoskins, "Anglocentric medieval genealogy"]</ref> Masarelli is better known as the general secretary of the [[Council of Trent]], who recorded the daily occurrings of the council.<ref> [http://asv.vatican.va/en/arch/council.htm "The Archives: the past & the present", section "The Council of Trent"]</ref>


==Family==
Her parents were Theodore Kantakouzenos and Euphrosyne Palaiologina. The Massarelli manuscript names her brothers in order of birth as Demetrios, Manuel, George, Andronikos and Thomas. Andronikos in noted as father to a younger Theodore Kantakouzenos. This Theodore married Maria Notaraina, a daughter of [[Loukas Notaras]] and his wife Palaiologina. Theodore was executed along with his father-in-law by orders of [[Mehmed II]] of the [[Ottoman Empire]] in 1453. Thomas is given as a son-in-law of a [[Holy Roman Emperor]] but the manuscript does not clarify which one. He is noted as dying in 1463.<ref name="fmg.ac">[http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BYZANTIUM%2012611453.htm#TheodorosKantadied1410B Profile of Theodore Kantakouzenos and his children in "Medieval Lands" by Charles Cawley]</ref>
Irene was one of the sisters of [[George Palaiologos Kantakouzenos]], according to Spandounes and other sources.<ref name=Nicol-184>Nicol, ''Byzantine Family'', p. 184</ref> The genealogy [[Donald Nicol]] had constructed gives George and Irene at least four siblings: [[Andronikos Palaiologos Kantakouzenos]], [[Thomas Kantakouzenos]], [[Helena Kantakouzene, Empress of Trebizond|Helena Kantakouzene]], and one more sister who married a [[List of monarchs of Georgia|king of Georgia]].<ref name=Nicol-176>Nicol, ''Byzantine Family'', p. 176</ref> Although he speculated their father was [[Demetrios I Kantakouzenos]], Nicols was "certain" that their grandfather was [[Matthew Kantakouzenos]] and their great-grandfather the Emperor [[John VI Kantakouzenos]].<ref>Nicol, ''Byzantine Family'', p. 176.</ref> However, Nicol later backed away from this identification of Irene and George's father, instead stating that it is more likely that he was Demetrios' brother [[Theodore Kantakouzenos]].<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/1291347 | jstor=1291347 | title=The Byzantine Family of Kantakouzenos: Some Addenda and Corrigenda | last1=Nicol | first1=Donald M. | journal=Dumbarton Oaks Papers | date=1973 | volume=27 | pages=309–315 [312f] | doi=10.2307/1291347 }}</ref>


Irene married Đurađ Branković on 26 December 1414, Irene having come to Serbia from [[Thessalonika]]; he would not become Despot of Serbia until 1427, by which time they had been married 13 years.<ref name=Nicol-184/> No contemporary source states which of Branković's five children were also Irene's, although the youngest, Catherine, bore the name of Kantakouzenos, and Mara was "clearly" the daughter of Eirene.<ref>Nicol, ''Byzantine Family'', p. 187</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2011-07-16 |title=Anglocentric medieval genealogy |url=http://newsgroups.derkeiler.com/Archive/Soc/soc.genealogy.medieval/2008-03/msg00384.html |access-date=2023-11-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716162109/http://newsgroups.derkeiler.com/Archive/Soc/soc.genealogy.medieval/2008-03/msg00384.html |archive-date=2011-07-16 }}</ref> Based on portraits of Irene with Đurađ Branković and his five children from a chrysobull preserved at the monastery of Esphigmenou on [[Mount Athos]], dated 11 September 1429, Nicol interprets how the individuals were grouped that [[Stefan Branković|Stefan]] and Lazar were her children too. He also adds that Theodore Spandounes "records at the time of their mutilation by the Sultan Murad II in 1441 Gregory and Stephen were aged sixteen and fifteen respectively, which, if correct, signifies that Gregory too must have been a child of Eirene".<ref>Nicol, ''Byzantine Family'', pp. 187f</ref>
Theodora is given as the youngest daughter of her parents. Her older sisters are given as [[Theodora Kantakouzene, wife of Alexios IV of Trebizond|Theodora Kantakouzene]] and Maria Kantakouzene. Maria was married to [[Alexios IV of Trebizond]]. [[Theodore Spandounes]], a 16th century historian, names another sister of Irene as [[Helena Kantakouzene, Empress of Trebizond|Helena Kantakouzene]]. He calls her wife of [[David of Trebizond]], a son of Theodora. The marriage of an aunt to a nephew was within the [[prohibited degree of kinship]] as defined by the [[Eastern Orthodox Church]]. Spandounes was possibly confused on which Emperor of Trebizond was brother-in-law to Eirene.<ref name="fmg.ac"/>


==Legends==
The manuscript is silent on which member of the Kantakouzenoi was the paternal grandfather of Theodora. Byzantine naming conventions named the eldest grandson of a couple by the name of a grandparent. Since in this case the eldest was named Demetrios, the paternal grandfather was likely also named Demetrios Kantakouzenos. [[Demetrios I Kantakouzenos]] has been suggested.<ref name="fmg.ac"/> Later genealogies have depicted Demetrios I as the father of Irene, ignoring the Massarelli manuscript.<ref> [http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant5.html Kantakuzenos family]</ref>
Irene, being a [[Byzantine Greeks|Greek]], and with her brothers also being very influential to the new [[Despotism|despot]], people began to dislike her, attributing to her many vicious and evil characteristics including that building of [[Smederevo]] was her caprice. In [[folk poetry]] she has been dubbed ''Prokleta Jerina'' ({{lang-sr-Cyrl|Проклета Јерина}}, the "Damned Jerina" or "Jerina the Cursed").


The [[Maglič]] Fortress, nearby [[Kraljevo]] in [[Serbia]] is also known as the fortress of damned Jerina. It was built in the 13th century. Damned Jerina, who used to throw her lovers into the deep well inside the walls, built it, the legend reads.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.travel-library.com/tours/europe/serbia_and_montenegro/belgrade/ethno_serbia_tour.html |title=Ethno Serbia Tour - Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro |publisher=Travel Library |access-date=2012-08-08 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120305024043/http://www.travel-library.com/tours/europe/serbia_and_montenegro/belgrade/ethno_serbia_tour.html |archive-date=2012-03-05 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
Demetrios was in turn a son of [[Matthew Kantakouzenos]] and [[Irene Palaiologina (Byzantine empress)|Irene Palaiologina]].<ref> [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BYZANTIUM%2012611453.htm#MatthaiosKantadied1383 Profile of Matthew in "Medieval Lands" by Charles Cawley]</ref> Matthew was a son of Byzantine Emperor of [[John VI Kantakouzenos]] and [[Irene Asanina]].<ref> [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BYZANTIUM%2012611453.htm#IoannesVIdied1383B Profile of John VI in "Medieval Lands" by Charles Cawley]</ref>


The [[Užice Fortress]] has the legend similar to this. In local tradition she is described as a cruel queen who threw children from highest tower to dark river [[Đetinja]]. The meaning of river's name can be translated as "of the children".
==Marriage and children==


[[Vuk Stefanović Karadžić]] wrote several Serbian folk songs where she is mentioned: "Đurđeva Jerina", "Dva Despotovića", "Ženidba Đurđa Smederevca", "Kad je Janko vojvoda udarao Đurđa despota buzdohanom", "Oblak Radosav"<ref>{{cite web|url=http://sr.wikisource.org/sr/%D0%9E%D0%B1%D0%BB%D0%B0%D0%BA_%D0%A0%D0%B0%D0%B4%D0%BE%D1%81%D0%B0%D0%B2 |script-title=sr:Облак Радосав – Викизворник |language=sr |publisher=Sr.wikisource.org |date=2012-07-13 |access-date=2012-08-08}}</ref> and "Starina Novak i knez Bogosav".
Irene married [[Đurađ Branković]], [[List of Serbian monarchs|Prince of Serbia]] on December 26, 1414. They had at least six children <ref> [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SERBIA.htm#DjuradjVukovicdied1456 Profile of Đurađ in "Medieval Lands" by Charles Cawley]</ref>:


The [[anthroponym]] Irina became Jerina and it can be seen from three aspects: (1) From the aspect of phonetic adaptation of the anthroponym: the Greek name ''Irina'' became the Serbian name ''Jerina''; (2) from the aspect of derivation of the appellative ''jerina'' (the ruins of an old town) from the anthroponym ''Jerina'', and (3) from the aspect of the change in the meaning of the name ''Irina'' (meaning "peace" in Greek) into the name which bears a negative connotation in Serbia and the name that becomes a protective name: that is, the new-born female children, in the families which have no male children, are named ''Jerina'' in order to stop the birth of further female children.
*Todor Branković (d. before 1429). Not mentioned in the Masarelli manuscrpipt, probably died early
*[[Grgur Branković|Grgur (Gregory) Branković]] (c. 1415 - October 16, 1459 &ndash; October 17, 1459). Mentioned first in the Masarelli manuscript. Father of [[Vuk Grgurević]].
*[[Mara Branković]] (c. 1416 - September 14, 1487). Mentioned second in the Masarelli manuscript. Married [[Murad II]] of the [[Ottoman Empire]].
*[[Stefan Branković]] (c. 1417 - 1476). Mentioned third in the Masarelli manuscript. Blinded in 1441. Claimed the throne of Serbia following the death of his younger brother Lazar.
*Catherine Cantacuzena (c. 1418 - 1490). Married [[Ulrich II of Celje]]. Mentioned fourth in the Masarelli manuscript.
*[[Lazar Branković]] (c. 1421/27 - January 20, 1458 &ndash; June 20, 1458). Mentioned fifth and last in the Masarelli manuscript.


Serbian writer Vidan Nikolić wrote a [[novel]] ''Prokleta Jerina'' about her life. Some earlier versions of this novel had a title "The Shadow of the despotess"<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.uzice.net/knjizara/nikolic-jerina.htm |title=Zena i mirisi |publisher=Uzice.net |access-date=2012-08-08 |archive-date=2012-03-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120310124448/http://www.uzice.net/knjizara/nikolic-jerina.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref>
==Legends==
Being a Greek and with her brothers very influential to the new despot, people began to dislike her, attributing to her many vicious and evil characteristics including that building of Smederevo was her caprice. In folk poetry she's been dubbed Prokleta Jerina (the Damned Jerina or Jerina the Cursed), but nothing of this can't be confirmed from historical sources.


==See also==
The Maglic fortress, nearby Kraljevo in Serbia is also known as the fortress of damned Jerina. It was built in 13th century. Damned Jerina, who used to throw her lovers into the deep well inside the walls, built it, the legend reads.<ref>http://www.travel-library.com/tours/europe/serbia_and_montenegro/belgrade/ethno_serbia_tour.html </ref>
*[[List of Serbian consorts]]
<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbian_Despotate</ref>


== Annotations ==
The Uzice fortress has the legend similar to this. In local tradition she is described as a cruel queen who throwed children from highest tower to dark river Djetinja. The meaning of river's name can be translated as ''of the children''.
{{Cnote2 Begin|liststyle=upper-alpha}}
{{Cnote2|a|Other names found scarcely in Serbian historiography include: '''Jerina Branković''' ({{lang-sr-Cyrl|Јерина Бранковић}} {{IPA|sh|jɛ̌rina brǎːŋkɔʋit͡ɕ|}}) and '''Jerina Kantakuzina''' ({{lang|sr-Cyrl|Јерина Кантакузина}}).}}
{{Cnote2 End}}


==References==
Vuk Stefanović Karadžić wrote several serbian folk songs where she is mentioned: "Đurđeva Jerina", "Dva Despotovića", "Ženidba Đurđa Smederevca", "Kad je Janko vojvoda udarao Đurđa despota buzdohanom", "Oblak Radosav"<ref>http://sr.wikisource.org/sr/%D0%9E%D0%B1%D0%BB%D0%B0%D0%BA_%D0%A0%D0%B0%D0%B4%D0%BE%D1%81%D0%B0%D0%B2</ref> and "Starina Novak i knez Bogosav".
{{reflist|2}}


==Sources==
The anthroponym Irina became Jerina and it can be seen from three aspects: (1) From the aspect of phonetic adaptation of the anthroponym : the Greek name Irina became the Serbian name Jerina; (2) From the aspect of derivation of the appellative jerina (the ruins of an old town) from the anthroponym Jerina, and (3) From the aspect of the change in the meaning of the name Irina (meaning peace in Greek) into the name which bears a negative connotation in Serbia and the name that becomes a protective name: that is, the new-born female children, in the families which have no male children, are named Jerina in order to stop the birth of further female children.
* {{The Byzantine Family of Kantakouzenos}}


== External links==
Serbian writer Vidan Nikolić wrote a novel "Prokleta Jerina", about her life. Some earlier versions of this novel had a title "The Shadow of the despotess"<ref>http://www.uzice.net/knjizara/nikolic-jerina.htm</ref>
*{{cite web |last=Marek |first=Miroslav |url=http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant5.html |title= Kantakuzenos family |publisher= Genealogy.EU}}{{Self-published source|date=August 2012}}
*{{cite web |last=Marek |first=Miroslav |url=http://genealogy.euweb.cz/balkan/balkan16.html |title= The Brankovici |publisher= Genealogy.EU}}{{Self-published source|date=August 2012}}


{{S-start}}
==See also==
*[[List of Serbian consorts]]

{{Start box}}
{{S-roy}}
{{S-roy}}
{{s-break}}
|-
{{S-bef|before=[[Helena Gattilusio]]}}
{{S-bef|before=[[Helena Gattilusio]]}}
{{S-ttl|title=[[List of Serbian consorts|Despotess of Serbia]]|years=1414-}}
{{S-ttl|title=[[List of Serbian consorts|Despotess of Serbia]]|years=1414–1456}}
{{S-aft|after=[[Helena Palaiologina of Morea|Helena Palaiologina]]}}
{{S-aft|after=[[Helena Palaiologina of the Morea|Helena Palaiologina]]}}
{{End}}
{{End}}


{{Serbian royal consorts}}
==References==
{{Slavic mythology}}
{{reflist}}
*[http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant5.html Kantakuzenos family]
*[http://genealogy.euweb.cz/balkan/balkan16.html The Brankovici]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Kantakouzene, Irene}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kantakouzene, Irene}}
[[Category:1400s births]]
[[Category:1457 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Istanbul]]
[[Category:15th-century Serbian royalty]]
[[Category:15th-century Serbian royalty]]
[[Category:15th-century Byzantine people]]
[[Category:15th-century Byzantine people]]
[[Category:1400s births]]
[[Category:15th-century Greek people]]
[[Category:1457 deaths]]
[[Category:15th-century Greek women]]
[[Category:Kantakouzenos family|Irene]]
[[Category:Kantakouzenos family|Irene]]
[[Category:Women of the Byzantine Empire]]
[[Category:15th-century Byzantine women]]
[[Category:Women of medieval Serbia]]
[[Category:Medieval Serbian royal consorts]]
[[Category:Serbian people of Greek descent]]
[[Category:Medieval Serbian people]]
[[Category:Branković dynasty]]

[[bg:Ирина Кантакузина]]
[[hr:Irina Kantakouzene]]
[[ru:Ирина Кантакузина]]
[[sr:Јерина Бранковић]]

Latest revision as of 01:16, 24 November 2024

Irene Kantakouzene
Despotess of Serbia
Tenure19 July 1427 – 24 December 1456
Bornc. 1400
Constantinople, Byzantine Empire
(modern-day Istanbul, Turkey)
Died3 May 1457
Rudnik, Gornji Milanovac, Serbian Despotate
(modern-day Serbia)
Spouses
(m. 1414; died 1456)
IssueTodor Branković (?)
Grgur Branković
Mara Branković
Stefan Branković
Katarina, Countess of Celje
Lazar Branković
HouseKantakouzenos (birth)
Branković (marriage)
FatherTheodore Kantakouzenos
MotherHelena Ouresina Doukaina

Irene Kantakouzene (Greek: Ειρήνη Καντακουζηνή, Eiréne Kantakouzené, modern pronunciation Iríni Kantakouziní [iriˈni kantakusini'], Serbian: Ирина Кантакузин / Irina Kantakuzin; c. 1400 – 3 May 1457), known simply as Despotess Jerina[a] (Serbian: деспотица Јерина / despotica Jerina), was the wife of Serbian Despot Đurađ Branković. In Serbian folk legends, she is the founder of many fortresses in Serbia.

Life

[edit]

Although the Smederevo Fortress was the work of Đurađ Branković (completed in 1430), Irene apparently had a role in its construction; one of its towers is known as "Jerina [Irene]'s Tower" (Serbian: Јеринина кула / Jerinina kula), and she is blamed for causing hardship on the inhabitants of the countryside by levying taxes and recruiting forced labor for building the fortress.[1] The fortress traded hands between the Serbs and the Ottomans over the following years until it fell on 20 June 1459, more than two years after Branković, and then Irene, had died.[2]

Nicols describes the circumstances of Irene's death as "melancholy". According to the account of historian Michael Critobulus, upon the death of Đurađ Branković, his youngest son Lazar became Despot under her regency. However Lazar swiftly deprived her of all authority and treated her so badly that she tried to escape to the court of Sultan Mehmet II with her daughter Mara and her son Grgur (Gregory). Lazar pursued them, and captured Irene although Mara and Gregory successfully escaped. Irene soon became ill and died on the night of 2–3 May at Rudnik, where she was buried. Theodore Spandounes, a 16th-century historian records the accusation that Lazar poisoned her.[2]

Family

[edit]

Irene was one of the sisters of George Palaiologos Kantakouzenos, according to Spandounes and other sources.[3] The genealogy Donald Nicol had constructed gives George and Irene at least four siblings: Andronikos Palaiologos Kantakouzenos, Thomas Kantakouzenos, Helena Kantakouzene, and one more sister who married a king of Georgia.[4] Although he speculated their father was Demetrios I Kantakouzenos, Nicols was "certain" that their grandfather was Matthew Kantakouzenos and their great-grandfather the Emperor John VI Kantakouzenos.[5] However, Nicol later backed away from this identification of Irene and George's father, instead stating that it is more likely that he was Demetrios' brother Theodore Kantakouzenos.[6]

Irene married Đurađ Branković on 26 December 1414, Irene having come to Serbia from Thessalonika; he would not become Despot of Serbia until 1427, by which time they had been married 13 years.[3] No contemporary source states which of Branković's five children were also Irene's, although the youngest, Catherine, bore the name of Kantakouzenos, and Mara was "clearly" the daughter of Eirene.[7][8] Based on portraits of Irene with Đurađ Branković and his five children from a chrysobull preserved at the monastery of Esphigmenou on Mount Athos, dated 11 September 1429, Nicol interprets how the individuals were grouped that Stefan and Lazar were her children too. He also adds that Theodore Spandounes "records at the time of their mutilation by the Sultan Murad II in 1441 Gregory and Stephen were aged sixteen and fifteen respectively, which, if correct, signifies that Gregory too must have been a child of Eirene".[9]

Legends

[edit]

Irene, being a Greek, and with her brothers also being very influential to the new despot, people began to dislike her, attributing to her many vicious and evil characteristics including that building of Smederevo was her caprice. In folk poetry she has been dubbed Prokleta Jerina (Serbian Cyrillic: Проклета Јерина, the "Damned Jerina" or "Jerina the Cursed").

The Maglič Fortress, nearby Kraljevo in Serbia is also known as the fortress of damned Jerina. It was built in the 13th century. Damned Jerina, who used to throw her lovers into the deep well inside the walls, built it, the legend reads.[10]

The Užice Fortress has the legend similar to this. In local tradition she is described as a cruel queen who threw children from highest tower to dark river Đetinja. The meaning of river's name can be translated as "of the children".

Vuk Stefanović Karadžić wrote several Serbian folk songs where she is mentioned: "Đurđeva Jerina", "Dva Despotovića", "Ženidba Đurđa Smederevca", "Kad je Janko vojvoda udarao Đurđa despota buzdohanom", "Oblak Radosav"[11] and "Starina Novak i knez Bogosav".

The anthroponym Irina became Jerina and it can be seen from three aspects: (1) From the aspect of phonetic adaptation of the anthroponym: the Greek name Irina became the Serbian name Jerina; (2) from the aspect of derivation of the appellative jerina (the ruins of an old town) from the anthroponym Jerina, and (3) from the aspect of the change in the meaning of the name Irina (meaning "peace" in Greek) into the name which bears a negative connotation in Serbia and the name that becomes a protective name: that is, the new-born female children, in the families which have no male children, are named Jerina in order to stop the birth of further female children.

Serbian writer Vidan Nikolić wrote a novel Prokleta Jerina about her life. Some earlier versions of this novel had a title "The Shadow of the despotess"[12]

See also

[edit]

Annotations

[edit]
  1. ^
    Other names found scarcely in Serbian historiography include: Jerina Branković (Serbian Cyrillic: Јерина Бранковић [jɛ̌rina brǎːŋkɔʋit͡ɕ]) and Jerina Kantakuzina (Јерина Кантакузина).

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Donald M. Nicol, The Byzantine Family of Kantakouzenos (Cantacuzenus) ca. 1100-1460: a Genealogical and Prosopographical Study (Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks, 1968), p. 185
  2. ^ a b Nicol, Byzantine Family, p. 186
  3. ^ a b Nicol, Byzantine Family, p. 184
  4. ^ Nicol, Byzantine Family, p. 176
  5. ^ Nicol, Byzantine Family, p. 176.
  6. ^ Nicol, Donald M. (1973). "The Byzantine Family of Kantakouzenos: Some Addenda and Corrigenda". Dumbarton Oaks Papers. 27: 309–315 [312f]. doi:10.2307/1291347. JSTOR 1291347.
  7. ^ Nicol, Byzantine Family, p. 187
  8. ^ "Anglocentric medieval genealogy". 2011-07-16. Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2023-11-04.
  9. ^ Nicol, Byzantine Family, pp. 187f
  10. ^ "Ethno Serbia Tour - Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro". Travel Library. Archived from the original on 2012-03-05. Retrieved 2012-08-08.
  11. ^ Облак Радосав – Викизворник (in Serbian). Sr.wikisource.org. 2012-07-13. Retrieved 2012-08-08.
  12. ^ "Zena i mirisi". Uzice.net. Archived from the original on 2012-03-10. Retrieved 2012-08-08.

Sources

[edit]
[edit]
Royal titles
Preceded by Despotess of Serbia
1414–1456
Succeeded by