Teodora-Evdokija

(Redirected from Teodora Nemanjić)

Teodora Nemanjić (Serbian Cyrillic: Теодора Немањић; 1330 – after 1381) was the despotess of Kumanovo as the wife of Despot Dejan (fl. 1355). She was the daughter of King Stefan Dečanski and her eldest half-brother was Serbian emperor, Stefan Dušan.[1] She was the mother of two sons, Constantine Dragaš and Jovan Dragaš, and one daughter. She later became a nun adopting the name Evdokija (Евдокија, gr. Eudokia), hence she is known in historiography as Teodora-Evdokija (Теодора-Евдокија).

Teodora-Evdokija
Теодора-Евдокија
Despotess of Kumanovo
Fresco painting of Teodora,
from Visoki Dečani monastery (UNESCO)
Born1330
Diedafter 1381
Despot Dejan
IssueConstantine Dragaš
Jovan Dragaš
Teodora Dragaš
House Nemanjić
FatherStephen Uroš III Dečanski of Serbia
MotherMaria Palaiologina
ReligionSerbian Orthodox

Family

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Theodora was born in 1330,[citation needed] the youngest daughter and child of King Stefan Dečanski of Serbia by his second wife, Maria Palaiologina. Her maternal grandparents were John Komnenos Palaiologos, Governor of Thessaloniki and Irene Metochitissa.[citation needed] Theodora had one full brother, Simeon Uroš and a sister, Jelena; she also had two half-siblings from her father's first marriage to Teodora of Bulgaria, Queen of Serbia, Stefan Uroš Dušan and Dušica. When Theodora was a year old, at the insistence of the nobility, Stefan Uroš Dušan had their father deposed and imprisoned in chains.[citation needed] He consequently usurped the Serbian throne as Stefan Uroš IV Dušan. Five years later, Theodora's father was murdered by strangulation.[citation needed] Her mother unsuccessfully attempted to obtain the crown for Simeon; defeated in her efforts, she retired to a convent and died in 1355.

Marriage

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In 1347, at 17 years of age, Teodora married Despot Dejan. He was granted the title of sebastokrator by her brother, Dušan.[citation needed] Sometime after her marriage a fresco painting of Teodora was executed at the Serbian Orthodox Christian monastery of Visoki Dečani. Teodora and Dejan had three children:

Religious life

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On an unrecorded date, Theodora followed in her mother's footsteps and also entered a religious life. Her mother had taken the name Marta, and Teodora, upon becoming a nun, adopted the name Eudokia. In a charter dated 1379, it was recorded that Eudocia imperatrix et filius Constantinus donated property to the Chilandar Monastery.[citation needed]

Ancestry

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Mihaljčić, Rade (1984). Lazar Hrebeljanović: istorija, kult, predanje (in Serbian). Nolit. p. 54, 55, 369. Retrieved 2 November 2024.