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Olivera Despina

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Died
  
1444

Spouse
  
Bayezid I (m. 1389–1403)

Name
  
Olivera Despina


Mother
  
Milica Nemanjic

House
  
House of Lazarevic

Nieces
  
Catherine of Bosnia

Olivera Despina wwwdugenociicrnezastaversimgstraniceolivera

Father
  
Lazar Hrebeljanovic of Serbia

Role
  
Lazar of Serbia's daughter

Parents
  
Princess Milica of Serbia, Lazar of Serbia

Siblings
  
Stefan Lazarevic, Jelena Balsic, Vuk Lazarevic, Dragana of Serbia, Mara Lazarevic, Teodora Lazarevic

Grandparents
  
Vratko Nemanjic, Pribac Hrebeljanovic

Similar People
  
Bayezid I, Lazar of Serbia, Princess Milica of Serbia, Stefan Lazarevic, Jelena Balsic

Mileva Olivera Lazarević, Despina Hatun (Serbian Cyrillic: Деспина Оливера Лазаревић; 1372 – after 1444) was the youngest daughter of Lazar of Serbia and Princess Milica and the wife of Ottoman Sultan Bayezid I, whom she married just after the Battle of Kosovo in 1389, as a pledge of peace between the Lazarević and Ottoman dynasties. After the marriage, she became Despina Hatun (Turkish for "Lady Despina").

Contents

Olivera Despina httpssmediacacheak0pinimgcomoriginals78

Biography

Olivera Despina Hatun was born around 1372, the youngest daughter of Prince Lazar and Princess Milica of Serbia. Her mother was a descendant of Grand Prince (Veliki župan) Stefan Nemanja, the founder of the Nemanjić dynasty and the fourth cousin once removed of Emperor Dušan of Serbia. Olivera had four older sisters, Mara (mother of Serbian despot Đurađ Branković), Dragana, Teodora, and Jelena (mother of Balša III, the last ruler of Zeta) and two brothers, Serbian despot Stefan Lazarević and Vuk. After the Battle of Kosovo in 1389, Olivera was sent to the harem of Sultan Bayezid I, where she remained for the next 12 years and became one of sultan's four wives (in addition to his concubines). Despite her marriage, she never converted to Islam. She had a great influence on the sultan, which helped her people, country, and family survive the turbulent times.

In the Battle of Ankara on 20 July 1402, Olivera and Bayezid were captured by Timur. She was released in 1403, after her husband's death in captivity.

She spent the rest of her life in the court of her brother Stefan in Belgrade or in the court of her sister Jelena in Herceg Novi. Olivera died sometime after 1444.

Literature

  • Princess Olivera, a forgotten Serbian Heroine, Princess Olivera Foundation, Belgrade 2009 (ISBN 978-86-912875-2-8)
  • References

    Olivera Despina Wikipedia