Peter Spani (League of Lezhë)
Peter Spani (Albanian: Pjetër Spani; fl. 1430–1457) was a Catholic Albanian nobleman and Venetian pronoier in the first half of the 15th century. His family's domains included territories around Shkodër (Scutari), Drisht (Drivasto) and western Kosovo.[1] He ruled over Shala, Shosh, Nikaj-Mërtur (Lekbibaj) and Pult; the whole region under the Ottomans took his name, Petrişpan-ili (literally, "dominions of Pjetër Shpani"). Between 1444 and 1455, Peter was a member of the League of Lezhë and after his death, the League took his territories.
Peter Spani | |
---|---|
Noble family | Spani |
Father | Marin Spani |
Family
Peter's father, Marin, is first mentioned in 1409 as already deceased.[2] And since Peter did not have any sons, he emphasized that his succeesor would be his nephew Marin, a son of his brother Brajko.[3] Peter's other brother, Stefan,[4] was appointed by the Venetians as the lord of village Podgora in 1406.[5][6][1]
League of Lezhë
In March 1444, Peter Spani attended a meeting of several noblemen from Albania held in Lezhë when they allied themselves into a League of Lezhë.[7] The League of Lezhë was founded by:[8][9][10]
- Lekë Zaharia (lord of Sati and Dagnum) and his vassals Pal Dukagjin and Nicholas Dukagjini
- Peter Spani (lord of the mountains behind Drivasto)
- Lekë Dushmani (lord of Pult)
- George Stresi Balsha with John and Gojko Balšić
- Andrea Thopia with his nephew Tanush Thopia
- Gjergj Arianiti
- Theodor Corona Musachi
- Stefan Crnojević with his sons
In 1451 after Alfonso signed the Treaty of Gaeta with Skanderbeg, he signed similar treaties with Peter Spani and other chieftains from Albania: Gjergj Arianiti, Ghin Musachi, George Stresi Balsha, Pal III Dukagjini, Thopia Musachi, Peter of Himara, Simon Zanebisha and Carlo Toco.[11] John Musachi's Brief chronicle on the descendants of our Musachi dynasty (1515) mentions that he survived the war and lived to an advanced age.[12] In the early Ottoman-era subdivisions of Albania, the region formerly ruled by Pjetër Spani was known in Ottoman Turkish as Petrishpani or Ishpani.[13] From 1430 to 1456, the Spani are also often mentioned in the archives of the Republic of Ragusa.[14]
References
Citations
- Malović-Đukić 1991.
- Srpska Akademija Nauka i Umetnosti 1980, p. 39: "Петров отац Марин се помиње 1409 год као покојник..."
- Srpska Akademija Nauka i Umetnosti 1980, p. 39: "Сам тај Петар ни 1415 није имао мушких потомака па је истицао као свог наследника нећака Марина, сина већ преминутог Брајка."
- Bešić 1970, p. 91: "...затим браћу Петра и Стефана Спана..."
- Božić 1979, p. 277: "Стефан Спан, „скадарски племић", најпре je 1406. био постављен за главара великог села Подгоре,..."
- Bojović 1991, Marica Malović-Đukić, "Pilot u Srednjem Veku": "Стефан Спан je био главар села Подгоре...Стефан и Петар Спан били су браћа."
- Srpska Akademija Nauka i Umetnosti 1983, p. 72: "склопио је у Љешу (савез за рат против Турака. Тој скупштини, на којој је он изабран за вођа, присуствовао је и Петар Спан,..."
- Noli 1947, p. 36.
- Božić 1979, p. 364: "Никола Дукађин убио је Леку Закарију. Према млетачком хроничару Стефану Мању убио га је "у битки" као његов вазал. Мада Барлеције погрешно наводи да је убиство извршио Лека Дукађин..."
- Schmitt 2001, p. 297: "Nikola und Paul Dukagjin, Leka Zaharia von Dagno, Peter Span, Herr der Berge hinter Drivasto, Georg Strez Balsha sowie Johann und Gojko Balsha, die sich zwischen Kruja und Alessio festgesetzt hatten, die Dushman von Klein-Polatum sowie Stefan (Stefanica) Crnojevic, der Herr der Oberzeta..."
- Noli 1947, p. 49: "Later on Alphonse concluded similar treaties with George Araniti, Ghin Musachi, George Stresi Balsha, Peter Spani, Paul Ducaghini,..."
- Elsie 2003, p. 36.
- Pulaha 1968, p. 338.
- Demiraj & Camaj 2010, p. 544.
Sources
- Bešić, Zarij M. (1970). Istorija Črne Gore: Od Kraja XII do Kraqja XV Vijeka (in Serbian). Titograd: Redakčija za Istoriju Črne Gore.
- Bojović, Jovan R. (1991). Stanovništvo Slovenskog Porijekla u Albaniji: Zbornik Radova sa Međunarodnog Naučnog Skupa Održanog u Cetinju 21, 22. i 23. Juna 1990 (in Serbian). Titograd: Istorijski Institut SR Crne Gore.
- Božić, Ivan (1980) [1976]. "Спани - Шпање". Glas (in Serbian). Belgrade: Serbian Academy of Science and Arts. OCLC 183333221.
- Božić, Ivan (1979). Nemirno Pomorje XV Veka (in Serbian). Belgrade: Srpska Književna Zadruga. OCLC 5845972.
- Demiraj, Bardhyl; Camaj, Martin (2010). Wir sind die Deinen: Studien zur albanischen Sprache, Literatur und Kulturgeschichte, dem Gedenken an Martin Camaj (1925-1992) gewidmet (in German). Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. ISBN 978-3-447-06221-3.
- Elsie, Robert (2003). Early Albania: A Reader of Historical Texts, 11th–17th Centuries. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. ISBN 9783447047838.
- Malović-Đukić, Marica (1991). "Пилот у средњем веку". Становништво словенског поријекла у Албанији: Зборник радова са међународног научног скупа одржаног на Цетињу 21, 22. и 23. јуна 1990. године. Titograd: Историјски институт СР Црне Горе. OCLC 29549273.
- Noli, Fan Stilian (1947). George Castrioti Scanderbeg (1405–1468). New York: International Universities Press. OCLC 732882.
- Pulaha, Selami (1968). Lufta Shqiptaro-Turke në shekullin XV: Burime Osmane. Tirana: University of Tirana.
- Schmitt, Oliver Jens (2001). Das Venezianische Albanien (1392-1479) (in German). München: R. Oldenbourg Verlag GmbH München. ISBN 3-486-56569-9.
- Šufflay, Milan (1924). Städte und Burgen Albaniens, hauptsächlich während des Mittelalters (in German). Vienna: Hölder-Pichler-Tempsky A.-G. OCLC 4851524.
- Šufflay, Milan (1925). Srbi i Arbanasi: (Njihova Simbioza u Srednjem Vijeku) (in Serbian). Belgrade: Seminar za Arbanasku Filologiju. OCLC 440847167.
- Srpska Akademija Nauka i Umetnosti (1980). Glas (Volumes 319–323) (in Serbian). Belgrade: Serbian Academy of Science and Arts.
- Srpska Akademija Nauka i Umetnosti (1983). Glas (Volume 338) (in Serbian). Belgrade: Serbian Academy of Science and Arts.
Further reading
- Stavrides, Théoharis (2001). The Sultan of Vezirs: The Life and Times of the Ottoman Grand Vezir Mahmud Pasha Angelović (1453–1474). Leiden: Brill. ISBN 9789004121065.