fbpx
Wikipedia

Dukagjini family

The Dukagjini are an Albanian feudal noble family who ruled over an area of Northern Albania and Western Kosovo known as the Principality of Dukagjini in the 14th and 15th centuries. They may have been relatives or descendants of the earlier Progoni, who founded the first Albanian state in recorded history, the Principality of Arbanon.[1] The city of Lezhë was their most important holding.[2]

Dukagjini family
Place of originAlbania
MembersPal Dukagjini, Nicholas Dukagjini, Nicholas Pal Dukagjini and Lekë Dukagjini

The Dukagjini evolved from an extended clan (farefisni) to a feudal family in the late 13th century, when their first known progenitor Gjin Tanushi who became known as a dux (duke) and thus his descendants took the surname Dukagjini. By the early 15th century, they had evolved in one of the most important feudal families in the country. After the Ottoman conquest of Albania, a branch of them found refuge and settled in Venetian Koper, where they became known as the Docaini family which held the governorship of Socerb castle until the early 17th century, when the last male line Docaini died. Another branch, converted to Islam from Catholic Christianity and remained in the Ottoman Empire, where they reached the high ranks of Ottoman leadership and produced many governors (pashas) in the Middle East, where descendants of them live in the modern period.

Lekë Dukagjini is the best known member of the clan in Albania. He is remembered in oral tradition as the codifier of the best remembered Kanun (customary law) of Albania. Another Dukagjini is Yahya bey who was a famous diwan poet of the 16th century.

Name

The name Dukagjini is a compound of the personal name Gjin and the title duka (duke). The Dukagjini are descendants of an aristocrat named Gjin Tanushi who lived in the late 13th century. He is mentioned in 1281 in a letter of the captain of Angevine Durrazo as duca Ginium Tanuschium Albanensem.[3] The earlier family name of Gjin Tanush may be Progoni as he was likely a descendant of this family.[1] Archival documents of this era from Ragusa and Italy spell the name usually as Ducagini/Duchaginni. The Dukagjini who settled in Istria became known as the Ducaini or Docaini. In Ottoman Turkish, the Dukagjini became known as Dukaginzâde or Dukakinoğlu.

Origins

The Dukagjini family was part of an extended clan (farefisni) with several branches. The main branches in the early 15th century were those of Shkodër and Dibra and that of Lezhë. The extent of the fis in various regions is indicated in the names of three different areas: Leknia (named after one of the several Lekë Dukagjini) which extends from Mirdita to Malësia, the Dukagjin highlands to its north, and Rrafshi i Dukagjinit in western Kosovo.[4] The first known ancestor of the Dukagjini who gave his name to the family was an Albanian military figure, Gjin Tanushi, who in 1281 became known with the title of dux (ducam Ginium Tanuschium Albanensem).[5] He may have been a relative or a descendant of the earlier Progoni via protosevastos Progon, son of Gjin Progoni. The rule of this Progon in the Mirdita area, the many similarities between the emblem of the Progoni family in the Gëziq inscription and the coat of arms of the later Dukagjini and the claim of the Dukagjini that they were the hereditary overlords of Ndërfandë and the abbacy of Gëziq has led historians to consider that the two clans may have been related or even that the Dukagjini were descendants of the Progoni via protosevastos Progon.[1]

Gjin Tanushi is mentioned as an enemy of the Angevin rule in Albania who was later captured and imprisoned for his actions.[6] Gjon Muzaka wrote the first account about the origins of the Dukagjini in 1510. He describes an illustrious origin from Troy, after which they found refuge in France. From that country, two brothers came southwards again. One settled in Italy and was the progenitor of the Dukes of Ferrara and the other Duke Gjin came in Albania and took over the area of Zadrima. Gjon Muzaka's genealogies are considered highly dubious historically, but of value about what they reflect about their author and his era. Muzaka was married to Maria Dukagjini, a descendant of the family. Another such oral story which has been recorded in the archives of the Republic of Ragusa names them as regional rebels in the 7th century AD, who had twice attacked the city.[7][8]

A person with the Dukagjini name was mentioned in a 1377 document in Dubrovnik, as Nicolaus Tuderovich Duchaghi.[9] It is not possible to connect this person as being a relative of any other member of the Dukagjini family.[10]

History

 
Lands of the Dukagjini in late 14th century.

In the 15th century, sources appear for two separate branches of the Dukagjin family. The representative of one branch, Gjergj Dukagjini, appears as an owner of some villages near Lezhë and a commander of a force of 40 cavalry and 100 infantry. Although the Venetian Senate accepted his services, believing in his loyalty, he supported Zetan lord Balša III and fought against Venice when Balša III captured Venetian possessions near Scutari.[11] Gjergj Dukagjini died before 1409. In 1409, the Venetian Senate pardoned his son Nikola (Nikollë) for the activities of his father, based on the request of Dimitrije Jonima.[12]

According to the chronicle of Gjon Muzaka, Gjergj Dukagjini had three sons, Gjergj, Tanush, and Nicholas Dukagjini. Nicholas is first mentioned in a document dated to 1409. In 1443 he was a participant in the League of Lezhë, as vassal of Lekë Zaharia. Already in 1444 Nicholas killed Zaharia and tried to capture his pronoia, but failed to capture it, except Sati and several villages without a fight.[13] After Skanderbeg's war against Venice he signed a peace treaty with Venetians. Together with many other Albanian noblemen (such as Moisi Arianit Golemi, Pal Dukagjini and Hamza Kastrioti) he abandoned Skanderbeg's forces and deserted to the Ottomans.[14] Ottomans allowed him to govern 25 villages in Debar and 7 villages in Fandi.[15] Nicholas died before 1454.[16] His sons, Draga and Gjergj Dukagjini who were killed around 1462, ambushed by other nobleman from Albania, played minor political roles.[6][17]

The Dukagjini remained neutral during the First Scutari War.[18] They supported Serbian Despot Stefan Lazarević during the Second Scutari War until January 1423, when they, alongside some other nobility, were bribed over by the Venetians.[19] They were never mobilized, but left the ranks of Despot Stefan.[19] Although Venetian admiral Francesco Bembo offered money to Gjon Kastrioti II, the Dukagjini and to Koja Zaharija in April 1423 to join the Venetian forces against the Serbian Despotate, they refused.[20]

The names of the other branches of Dukagjini's family are mentioned in a Ragusian document from 1387. The brothers Lekë and Paul Dukagjini are described as owners of Lezhë who secured a free pass to Ragusan merchants in their dominion.

Pal Dukagjini (died 1393) had five sons named Tanush (the Little), Progon, Pal (II), Andrea, and Gjon Dukagjini. Pal II Dukagjini was killed in 1402 in Dalmatia while he was returning from Venice; Progon died in 1394. In a later document, Tanush appears as an ally of Koja Zaharia and appears to have died somewhere before 1433. Andrea Dukagjini died in 1416, while his brother Gjon became a priest and appears to have died in 1446.

Lekë Dukagjini had two sons, Progon and Tanush (Major) Dukagjini, and one daughter, Boša, who was married to Koja Zaharia.[21] Progon Dukagjini married the girl of Karl Thopia and appears to have been killed in 1402 under Venetian service. Tanush (Major) Dukagjini moved into Shkodër with his family, composed of two sons Pal and Lekë Dukagjini and two girls, of whom we only know one's name, Kale. In 1438, Tanush (Major) Dukagjini was interned in Padua and is not mentioned again in the chronicles.[22]

His little son, Lekë Dukagjini (born in 1420), did not play a great political role and is mentioned for the last time in 1451, as an enemy of Venice. His other son Pal Dukagjini (1411–1458) participated in the League of Lezhë and was an ally of Skanderbeg. On 21 October 1454, Alphonso V of Naples informed Skanderbeg that Pal Dukagjini sent his envoys and declared his loyalty and vassalage to the Kingdom of Naples. Based on that, Alphonso V awarded Pal Dukagjini with 300 ducats of annual provisions.[23]

Pal had four sons, Lekë, Nikollë, Progon, and Gjergj Dukagjini.[24]

The name of Gjergj Dukagjini is mentioned only once in historical sources, while his brother Progon died before 1471. The other two brothers, Lekë and Nikollë Dukagjini, left the country after the capture of Shkodër in 1479, going to Italy. They returned in 1481, trying to recapture their former territories from the Ottomans. One of their sons, Progon Dukagjini tried to do the same in 1501, but with little success.[24]

After the Dukagjini family left the League of Lezhë in 1450, together with Arianiti family, they concluded a peace with Ottoman Empire and started their actions against Skanderbeg.[25]

Some of the Dukagjinis seems to have fled to Venice along with other Venetians when they evacuated Shkodër, and a Luca Ducagini Duca di Pulato e dell stato Ducagino is recorded in Venice in 1506.[26]

Dukakinzade Ahmed Pasha (died March 1515) (Albanian: Ahmed Pasha Dukagjini), another descendant of the family, was an Albanian Ottoman statesman. He was grand vizier of the Ottoman Empire from 1512 to 1515. His son, Dukakinzade Mehmed Pasha (Turkish: Dukakinoğlu Mehmed Paşa), was the governor of the Egypt Eyalet from 1544 to 1546, until he was executed.[27]

Possessions

Pal and Nicholas' possessions

Pal Dukagjini and his kinsman Nicholas Dukagjini were initially subjects of Lekë Zaharia, a Venetian vassal who had possessions around Shkoder. Nicholas murdered Lekë, and the Dukagjini continued to rule over their villages Buba, Salita, Gurichuchi, Baschina under Venetian vassalage. Pal and Nicholas were part of the League of Lezhë, a military alliance forged in 1444 that sought to capture Albania from the Ottoman Empire, led by Skanderbeg. In 1450, they abandoned Skanderbeg's army and allied with Ottomans against Skanderbeg.[28]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Zamputi 1984, p. 218
  2. ^ Trnavci 2010, p. 207
  3. ^ Malaj 2016, p. 11.
  4. ^ Zojzi, Rrok; Dajaka, Abaz; Gjergji, Andromaqi; Qatipi, Hasan (1962). Etnografa Shqiptare. Academy of Sciences of Albania. p. 27.
  5. ^ Galaty et al. 2013, p. 53.
  6. ^ a b Historia e Popullit Shqiptar Albanian Academy of Science Tiranë 2002,Toena p. 264
  7. ^ Malaj 2016.
  8. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-01-11. Retrieved 2015-10-07.
  9. ^ Šufflay, Milan (1925). Srbi i Arbanasi: (njihova simbioza u srednjem vijeku). Seminar za arbanasku filologiju. p. 203. Retrieved 25 December 2013. Osim ovih, kako Musachi veli, pravih Dukadzina (la casa dei veri Du* cagueni) bilo je jos drugih linija (questi altri Ducagini). Takova jedna (Nicolaus Tuderovich Duchaghin) spominje te g. 1377. U Lesu odrzali se oni daleko u tursko doba.
  10. ^ Spremić, Momčilo (1964). Zbornik Filozofskog fakulteta (in Serbian). Naučno delo. p. 388. Retrieved 7 January 2014. ... али нема могућности да се он родбински веже за неког било старијег било млађег члана куће Дукађина.
  11. ^ Božić 1979, p. 355: "... мада је Сенат примио у службу Ђорђа Дукађина у уверењу да ће "увек бити веран нашој влади и послушан нашим управницима" он је убрзо окренуо леђа Млечанима и борио се против њих на страни Балше III.. "
  12. ^ Božić 1979, p. 355: "...Умро је пре 1409, када је Сенат, на молбе Димитрија Јониме, опростио његовом сину Николи очеве поступке против Млечана..."
  13. ^ Božić 1979, p. 365: Никола Дукађин наставио је борбу против нових господара Дања; заузео је Сати и неколико села која се нису могла бранити.
  14. ^ Skendi, Stavro (1980). Balkan cultural studies. East European Monographs. p. 175. ISBN 9780914710660. Retrieved 24 March 2012. ... Arianiti's nephew ... Nicholas and Paul Dukagjini and Hamza Kastrioti deserted to the Ottomans
  15. ^ Bešić 1970, p. 297: од којих је син некадашњегмлетачког пронијара — Никола Дукађин — добио пространепосједе, 25 села у Дебру и 7 села у области Фанди.
  16. ^ Božić 1979, p. 368: Још за живота Николе Дукађина (умро je пре 1454), између њих и Скен-дербега пукао je дубок јаз и одржавао ce годинама.
  17. ^ Božić 1979, p. 379: ...Млечани нису ништа предузимали, Турци нису проваљивали... ситна господа су несметано рашчишћавала старе рачуне. Ту је као жртва пао и Драга Дукађин ..."
  18. ^ Fine 1994, p. 512.
  19. ^ a b Fine 1994, p. 517.
  20. ^ Vujović, Dimitrije; Risto Dragićević; Nikola Đakonović; Milinko Đurović; Mirčeta Đurović; Pavle Mijović; Đoko Pejović; Vlado Strugar (1970), Milinko Đurović (ed.), Istorija Crne Gore [History of Montenegro] (in Serbian), vol. II, Titograd: Naučno Delo, p. 144, OCLC 633018773, Франћеско Бембо је настојао да привучена млетачку страну најистакнутије арбанаске господаре. Ивану Кастриоту је нудио 300, Који Закарији 200, а двојици Дукађина по сто дуката....Ни он ту није ништа учинио...
  21. ^ M. Bešić, Zarij (1970), Istorija Crne Gore / 2. Crna gora u doba oblasnih gospodara. (in Serbian), Titograd: Redakcija za istoiju Crne Gore, p. 101, OCLC 175122851, Како је Којина женабила Боша, сестра Тануша Великог Дукађина
  22. ^ The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest Author John Van Antwerp Fine Edition reprint, illustrated Publisher University of Michigan Press, 1994 ISBN 0-472-08260-4, ISBN 978-0-472-08260-5 p. 535-536
  23. ^ Spomenik, Volumes 95-97 (in Serbian). Serbian Academy of Science and Arts. 1942. p. xvi. Retrieved 2 February 2012. Кастел Нови код Напуља, 21. октобар 1454: Краљ Алфонс V јавља Скендербегу да му је Павле Дукађини преко свог посланика изјавио оданост и покорност и да му је као свом вазалу, одредио годишњу провизију од 300 дуката ...
  24. ^ a b Historia e Popullit Shqiptar Albanian Academy of Science Tiranë 2002,Toena p. 265
  25. ^ Frashëri 1964, p. 78: "In 1450 two powerful aristocratic families, Arianits and Dukagjins, left the league.... Skanderbeg tried to keep them near him. But his efforts failed. The Dukagjins not only did not accede, but on the contrary, concluded peace with Sultan and began to plot against Skanderbeg."
  26. ^ Edith Durham, M. (June 2009). Edith Durham. p. 31. ISBN 9781406828559.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-07. Retrieved 2014-01-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  28. ^ Frashëri, Kristo (1964), The history of Albania: a brief survey, Shqipëria: Tirana, p. 78, OCLC 230172517, retrieved 23 January 2012, In 1450 two powerful aristocratic families, Arianits and Dukagjins, left the league.... Skanderbeg tried to keep them near him. But his efforts failed. The Dukagjins not only did not accede, but on the contrary, concluded peace with Sultan and began to plot against Skanderbeg.

Sources

  • Štoka, Peter, ed. (2017). I Conti albanesi Ducagini a Capodistria: Castellani di San Servolo (PDF) (in Italian, Slovenian, and Albanian). Kulturno društvo Albancev slovenske Istre »Iliria« Koper.
  • Galaty, Michael; Lafe, Ols; Lee, Wayne; Tafilica, Zamir (2013). Light and Shadow: Isolation and Interaction in the Shala Valley of Northern Albania. The Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press. ISBN 978-1931745710.
  • Frashëri, Kristo (1964). The history of Albania: a brief survey. Tirana. OCLC 230172517. Retrieved 23 January 2012.
  • Slijepčević, Đoko M. (1983). Srpsko-arbanaški odnosi kroz vekove sa posebnim osvrtom na novije vreme (in Serbian). Himelstir. Retrieved 7 July 2011.
  • Fine, John Van Antwerp (1994), The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest, University of Michigan Press, ISBN 978-0-472-08260-5
  • Božić, Ivan (1979), Nemirno pomorje XV veka (in Serbian), Beograd: Srpska književna zadruga, OCLC 5845972
  • Bešić, Zarij M. (1970), Istorija Crne Gore / 2. Crna gora u doba oblasnih gospodara (in Serbian), Titograd: Redakcija za istoriju Crne Gore, OCLC 175122851
  • Malaj, Edmond (2016). "The Noble Dukagjinis during the Middle Ages. Their Territories and some Characteristics". Studime Historike. 1–2: 10.
  • Trnavci, Gene (2010). Mortimer Sellers (ed.). The interaction of customary law with the modern rule of law in Albania and Kosova. Springer. p. 205. ISBN 978-9048137497.
  • Zamputi, Injac (1984). "Rindërtimi i mbishkrimit të Arbërit dhe mundësitë e reja për leximin e tij / La reconstruction de l'inscription de l'Arbër et les nouvelles possibilités qui s'offrent pour sa lecture". Ilira. 14 (2).

External links

  • A Family Affair: The Dukagjinis in the British Library’s Ottoman Turkish Collections, British Library

dukagjini, family, other, uses, dukagjin, disambiguation, dukagjini, albanian, feudal, noble, family, ruled, over, area, northern, albania, western, kosovo, known, principality, dukagjini, 14th, 15th, centuries, they, have, been, relatives, descendants, earlie. For other uses see Dukagjin disambiguation The Dukagjini are an Albanian feudal noble family who ruled over an area of Northern Albania and Western Kosovo known as the Principality of Dukagjini in the 14th and 15th centuries They may have been relatives or descendants of the earlier Progoni who founded the first Albanian state in recorded history the Principality of Arbanon 1 The city of Lezhe was their most important holding 2 Dukagjini familyPlace of originAlbaniaMembersPal Dukagjini Nicholas Dukagjini Nicholas Pal Dukagjini and Leke DukagjiniThe Dukagjini evolved from an extended clan farefisni to a feudal family in the late 13th century when their first known progenitor Gjin Tanushi who became known as a dux duke and thus his descendants took the surname Dukagjini By the early 15th century they had evolved in one of the most important feudal families in the country After the Ottoman conquest of Albania a branch of them found refuge and settled in Venetian Koper where they became known as the Docaini family which held the governorship of Socerb castle until the early 17th century when the last male line Docaini died Another branch converted to Islam from Catholic Christianity and remained in the Ottoman Empire where they reached the high ranks of Ottoman leadership and produced many governors pashas in the Middle East where descendants of them live in the modern period Leke Dukagjini is the best known member of the clan in Albania He is remembered in oral tradition as the codifier of the best remembered Kanun customary law of Albania Another Dukagjini is Yahya bey who was a famous diwan poet of the 16th century Contents 1 Name 2 Origins 3 History 4 Possessions 4 1 Pal and Nicholas possessions 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Sources 7 External linksName EditThe name Dukagjini is a compound of the personal name Gjin and the title duka duke The Dukagjini are descendants of an aristocrat named Gjin Tanushi who lived in the late 13th century He is mentioned in 1281 in a letter of the captain of Angevine Durrazo as duca Ginium Tanuschium Albanensem 3 The earlier family name of Gjin Tanush may be Progoni as he was likely a descendant of this family 1 Archival documents of this era from Ragusa and Italy spell the name usually as Ducagini Duchaginni The Dukagjini who settled in Istria became known as the Ducaini or Docaini In Ottoman Turkish the Dukagjini became known as Dukaginzade or Dukakinoglu Origins EditThe Dukagjini family was part of an extended clan farefisni with several branches The main branches in the early 15th century were those of Shkoder and Dibra and that of Lezhe The extent of the fis in various regions is indicated in the names of three different areas Leknia named after one of the several Leke Dukagjini which extends from Mirdita to Malesia the Dukagjin highlands to its north and Rrafshi i Dukagjinit in western Kosovo 4 The first known ancestor of the Dukagjini who gave his name to the family was an Albanian military figure Gjin Tanushi who in 1281 became known with the title of dux ducam Ginium Tanuschium Albanensem 5 He may have been a relative or a descendant of the earlier Progoni via protosevastos Progon son of Gjin Progoni The rule of this Progon in the Mirdita area the many similarities between the emblem of the Progoni family in the Geziq inscription and the coat of arms of the later Dukagjini and the claim of the Dukagjini that they were the hereditary overlords of Nderfande and the abbacy of Geziq has led historians to consider that the two clans may have been related or even that the Dukagjini were descendants of the Progoni via protosevastos Progon 1 Gjin Tanushi is mentioned as an enemy of the Angevin rule in Albania who was later captured and imprisoned for his actions 6 Gjon Muzaka wrote the first account about the origins of the Dukagjini in 1510 He describes an illustrious origin from Troy after which they found refuge in France From that country two brothers came southwards again One settled in Italy and was the progenitor of the Dukes of Ferrara and the other Duke Gjin came in Albania and took over the area of Zadrima Gjon Muzaka s genealogies are considered highly dubious historically but of value about what they reflect about their author and his era Muzaka was married to Maria Dukagjini a descendant of the family Another such oral story which has been recorded in the archives of the Republic of Ragusa names them as regional rebels in the 7th century AD who had twice attacked the city 7 8 A person with the Dukagjini name was mentioned in a 1377 document in Dubrovnik as Nicolaus Tuderovich Duchaghi 9 It is not possible to connect this person as being a relative of any other member of the Dukagjini family 10 History Edit Lands of the Dukagjini in late 14th century In the 15th century sources appear for two separate branches of the Dukagjin family The representative of one branch Gjergj Dukagjini appears as an owner of some villages near Lezhe and a commander of a force of 40 cavalry and 100 infantry Although the Venetian Senate accepted his services believing in his loyalty he supported Zetan lord Balsa III and fought against Venice when Balsa III captured Venetian possessions near Scutari 11 Gjergj Dukagjini died before 1409 In 1409 the Venetian Senate pardoned his son Nikola Nikolle for the activities of his father based on the request of Dimitrije Jonima 12 According to the chronicle of Gjon Muzaka Gjergj Dukagjini had three sons Gjergj Tanush and Nicholas Dukagjini Nicholas is first mentioned in a document dated to 1409 In 1443 he was a participant in the League of Lezhe as vassal of Leke Zaharia Already in 1444 Nicholas killed Zaharia and tried to capture his pronoia but failed to capture it except Sati and several villages without a fight 13 After Skanderbeg s war against Venice he signed a peace treaty with Venetians Together with many other Albanian noblemen such as Moisi Arianit Golemi Pal Dukagjini and Hamza Kastrioti he abandoned Skanderbeg s forces and deserted to the Ottomans 14 Ottomans allowed him to govern 25 villages in Debar and 7 villages in Fandi 15 Nicholas died before 1454 16 His sons Draga and Gjergj Dukagjini who were killed around 1462 ambushed by other nobleman from Albania played minor political roles 6 17 The Dukagjini remained neutral during the First Scutari War 18 They supported Serbian Despot Stefan Lazarevic during the Second Scutari War until January 1423 when they alongside some other nobility were bribed over by the Venetians 19 They were never mobilized but left the ranks of Despot Stefan 19 Although Venetian admiral Francesco Bembo offered money to Gjon Kastrioti II the Dukagjini and to Koja Zaharija in April 1423 to join the Venetian forces against the Serbian Despotate they refused 20 The names of the other branches of Dukagjini s family are mentioned in a Ragusian document from 1387 The brothers Leke and Paul Dukagjini are described as owners of Lezhe who secured a free pass to Ragusan merchants in their dominion Pal Dukagjini died 1393 had five sons named Tanush the Little Progon Pal II Andrea and Gjon Dukagjini Pal II Dukagjini was killed in 1402 in Dalmatia while he was returning from Venice Progon died in 1394 In a later document Tanush appears as an ally of Koja Zaharia and appears to have died somewhere before 1433 Andrea Dukagjini died in 1416 while his brother Gjon became a priest and appears to have died in 1446 Leke Dukagjini had two sons Progon and Tanush Major Dukagjini and one daughter Bosa who was married to Koja Zaharia 21 Progon Dukagjini married the girl of Karl Thopia and appears to have been killed in 1402 under Venetian service Tanush Major Dukagjini moved into Shkoder with his family composed of two sons Pal and Leke Dukagjini and two girls of whom we only know one s name Kale In 1438 Tanush Major Dukagjini was interned in Padua and is not mentioned again in the chronicles 22 His little son Leke Dukagjini born in 1420 did not play a great political role and is mentioned for the last time in 1451 as an enemy of Venice His other son Pal Dukagjini 1411 1458 participated in the League of Lezhe and was an ally of Skanderbeg On 21 October 1454 Alphonso V of Naples informed Skanderbeg that Pal Dukagjini sent his envoys and declared his loyalty and vassalage to the Kingdom of Naples Based on that Alphonso V awarded Pal Dukagjini with 300 ducats of annual provisions 23 Pal had four sons Leke Nikolle Progon and Gjergj Dukagjini 24 The name of Gjergj Dukagjini is mentioned only once in historical sources while his brother Progon died before 1471 The other two brothers Leke and Nikolle Dukagjini left the country after the capture of Shkoder in 1479 going to Italy They returned in 1481 trying to recapture their former territories from the Ottomans One of their sons Progon Dukagjini tried to do the same in 1501 but with little success 24 After the Dukagjini family left the League of Lezhe in 1450 together with Arianiti family they concluded a peace with Ottoman Empire and started their actions against Skanderbeg 25 Some of the Dukagjinis seems to have fled to Venice along with other Venetians when they evacuated Shkoder and a Luca Ducagini Duca di Pulato e dell stato Ducagino is recorded in Venice in 1506 26 Dukakinzade Ahmed Pasha died March 1515 Albanian Ahmed Pasha Dukagjini another descendant of the family was an Albanian Ottoman statesman He was grand vizier of the Ottoman Empire from 1512 to 1515 His son Dukakinzade Mehmed Pasha Turkish Dukakinoglu Mehmed Pasa was the governor of the Egypt Eyalet from 1544 to 1546 until he was executed 27 Possessions EditPal and Nicholas possessions Edit Pal Dukagjini and his kinsman Nicholas Dukagjini were initially subjects of Leke Zaharia a Venetian vassal who had possessions around Shkoder Nicholas murdered Leke and the Dukagjini continued to rule over their villages Buba Salita Gurichuchi Baschina under Venetian vassalage Pal and Nicholas were part of the League of Lezhe a military alliance forged in 1444 that sought to capture Albania from the Ottoman Empire led by Skanderbeg In 1450 they abandoned Skanderbeg s army and allied with Ottomans against Skanderbeg 28 See also EditAlbanian principalities History of AlbaniaReferences Edit a b c Zamputi 1984 p 218 Trnavci 2010 p 207 Malaj 2016 p 11 Zojzi Rrok Dajaka Abaz Gjergji Andromaqi Qatipi Hasan 1962 Etnografa Shqiptare Academy of Sciences of Albania p 27 Galaty et al 2013 p 53 a b Historia e Popullit Shqiptar Albanian Academy of Science Tirane 2002 Toena p 264 Malaj 2016 Idris Guven Kaya Dukagin zade Taslicali Yahya Bey in Eserleridne Mevlana Celaleddin Turkish Studies Cilt 4 Sayi 7 Erzincan 2009 Gibbe gore sulalenin tarihcesi Hacli Seferlerine kadar dayanmaktadir Bu seferler sirasinda Normanlardan Le Duc Jean tarafindan kurulmus ve Iskodra yoresine yerlesen halk daha sonra yerli halkla karisarak Arnavutlasmis Ancak atalarini unutmamislar Le Duc Jeana izafeten kendilerine Duke Jean ya da Dukagin demislerdir PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 01 11 Retrieved 2015 10 07 Sufflay Milan 1925 Srbi i Arbanasi njihova simbioza u srednjem vijeku Seminar za arbanasku filologiju p 203 Retrieved 25 December 2013 Osim ovih kako Musachi veli pravih Dukadzina la casa dei veri Du cagueni bilo je jos drugih linija questi altri Ducagini Takova jedna Nicolaus Tuderovich Duchaghin spominje te g 1377 U Lesu odrzali se oni daleko u tursko doba Spremic Momcilo 1964 Zbornik Filozofskog fakulteta in Serbian Naucno delo p 388 Retrieved 7 January 2014 ali nema moguћnosti da se on rodbinski vezhe za nekog bilo stariјeg bilo mlaђeg chlana kuћe Dukaђina Bozic 1979 p 355 mada јe Senat primio u sluzhbu Ђorђa Dukaђina u uvereњu da ћe uvek biti veran nashoј vladi i poslushan nashim upravnicima on јe ubrzo okrenuo leђa Mlechanima i borio se protiv њih na strani Balshe III Bozic 1979 p 355 Umro јe pre 1409 kada јe Senat na molbe Dimitriјa Јonime oprostio њegovom sinu Nikoli ocheve postupke protiv Mlechana Bozic 1979 p 365 Nikola Dukaђin nastavio јe borbu protiv novih gospodara Daњa zauzeo јe Sati i nekoliko sela koјa se nisu mogla braniti Skendi Stavro 1980 Balkan cultural studies East European Monographs p 175 ISBN 9780914710660 Retrieved 24 March 2012 Arianiti s nephew Nicholas and Paul Dukagjini and Hamza Kastrioti deserted to the Ottomans Besic 1970 p 297 od koјih јe sin nekadashњegmletachkog proniјara Nikola Dukaђin dobio prostraneposјede 25 sela u Debru i 7 sela u oblasti Fandi Bozic 1979 p 368 Јosh za zhivota Nikole Dukaђina umro je pre 1454 izmeђu њih i Sken derbega pukao je dubok јaz i odrzhavao ce godinama Bozic 1979 p 379 Mlechani nisu nishta preduzimali Turci nisu provaљivali sitna gospoda su nesmetano rashchishћavala stare rachune Tu јe kao zhrtva pao i Draga Dukaђin Fine 1994 p 512 a b Fine 1994 p 517 Vujovic Dimitrije Risto Dragicevic Nikola Đakonovic Milinko Đurovic Mirceta Đurovic Pavle Mijovic Đoko Pejovic Vlado Strugar 1970 Milinko Đurovic ed Istorija Crne Gore History of Montenegro in Serbian vol II Titograd Naucno Delo p 144 OCLC 633018773 Franћesko Bembo јe nastoјao da privuchena mletachku stranu naјistaknutiјe arbanaske gospodare Ivanu Kastriotu јe nudio 300 Koјi Zakariјi 200 a dvoјici Dukaђina po sto dukata Ni on tu niјe nishta uchinio M Besic Zarij 1970 Istorija Crne Gore 2 Crna gora u doba oblasnih gospodara in Serbian Titograd Redakcija za istoiju Crne Gore p 101 OCLC 175122851 Kako јe Koјina zhenabila Bosha sestra Tanusha Velikog Dukaђina The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest Author John Van Antwerp Fine Edition reprint illustrated Publisher University of Michigan Press 1994 ISBN 0 472 08260 4 ISBN 978 0 472 08260 5 p 535 536 Spomenik Volumes 95 97 in Serbian Serbian Academy of Science and Arts 1942 p xvi Retrieved 2 February 2012 Kastel Novi kod Napuљa 21 oktobar 1454 Kraљ Alfons V јavљa Skenderbegu da mu јe Pavle Dukaђini preko svog poslanika izјavio odanost i pokornost i da mu јe kao svom vazalu odredio godishњu proviziјu od 300 dukata a b Historia e Popullit Shqiptar Albanian Academy of Science Tirane 2002 Toena p 265 Frasheri 1964 p 78 In 1450 two powerful aristocratic families Arianits and Dukagjins left the league Skanderbeg tried to keep them near him But his efforts failed The Dukagjins not only did not accede but on the contrary concluded peace with Sultan and began to plot against Skanderbeg Edith Durham M June 2009 Edith Durham p 31 ISBN 9781406828559 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2011 07 07 Retrieved 2014 01 05 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Frasheri Kristo 1964 The history of Albania a brief survey Shqiperia Tirana p 78 OCLC 230172517 retrieved 23 January 2012 In 1450 two powerful aristocratic families Arianits and Dukagjins left the league Skanderbeg tried to keep them near him But his efforts failed The Dukagjins not only did not accede but on the contrary concluded peace with Sultan and began to plot against Skanderbeg Sources Edit Stoka Peter ed 2017 I Conti albanesi Ducagini a Capodistria Castellani di San Servolo PDF in Italian Slovenian and Albanian Kulturno drustvo Albancev slovenske Istre Iliria Koper Galaty Michael Lafe Ols Lee Wayne Tafilica Zamir 2013 Light and Shadow Isolation and Interaction in the Shala Valley of Northern Albania The Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press ISBN 978 1931745710 Frasheri Kristo 1964 The history of Albania a brief survey Tirana OCLC 230172517 Retrieved 23 January 2012 Slijepcevic Đoko M 1983 Srpsko arbanaski odnosi kroz vekove sa posebnim osvrtom na novije vreme in Serbian Himelstir Retrieved 7 July 2011 Fine John Van Antwerp 1994 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 08260 5 Bozic Ivan 1979 Nemirno pomorje XV veka in Serbian Beograd Srpska knjizevna zadruga OCLC 5845972 Besic Zarij M 1970 Istorija Crne Gore 2 Crna gora u doba oblasnih gospodara in Serbian Titograd Redakcija za istoriju Crne Gore OCLC 175122851 Malaj Edmond 2016 The Noble Dukagjinis during the Middle Ages Their Territories and some Characteristics Studime Historike 1 2 10 Trnavci Gene 2010 Mortimer Sellers ed The interaction of customary law with the modern rule of law in Albania and Kosova Springer p 205 ISBN 978 9048137497 Zamputi Injac 1984 Rindertimi i mbishkrimit te Arberit dhe mundesite e reja per leximin e tij La reconstruction de l inscription de l Arber et les nouvelles possibilites qui s offrent pour sa lecture Ilira 14 2 External links EditA Family Affair The Dukagjinis in the British Library s Ottoman Turkish Collections British Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dukagjini family amp oldid 1095860462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.