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Revision as of 17:32, 22 December 2024 editWiiformii (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers29,543 editsm Typo fixing, typo(s) fixed: was force to → was forced to, ’s → 's (3)Tag: AWB← Previous edit Revision as of 21:03, 25 December 2024 edit undoTaulantianKnight (talk | contribs)296 editsm Made some fixes and editsTag: Visual editNext edit →
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| death_place = ] | death_place = ]
| burial_place = Church of Saint Mary, Bungë. | burial_place = Church of Saint Mary, Bungë.
| spouse = Chiranna Zadari | spouse = Chiranna Mataranga
| issue = ] <br> Andrea IIII Muzaka <br> Suina Muzaka <br> Maria Muzaka <br> Helena Muzaka <br> Comita Muzaka <br> Condisa Muzaka <br> Theodora Muzaka | issue = ] <br> ] <br> ]
| house = ] | house = ]
| house-type = Dynasty | house-type = Dynasty
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== Burial == == Burial ==
Like his mother Chiranna who built the ], Gjin was also a church builder and had constructed a church dedicated to ] in Bungë and was buried there with his wife Chiranna Zardari.<ref>Carl Hermann Friedrich Johann Hopf, S. 293</ref> His descendants had also constructed a church dedicated to ]. Due to agriculture and farming, the ruins of the church were fully destroyed. Like his mother Chiranna who built the ], Gjin was also a church builder and had constructed a church dedicated to ] in Bungë and was buried there with his wife Chiranna Zardari.<ref>Carl Hermann Friedrich Johann Hopf, S. 293</ref> His descendants had also constructed a church dedicated to ]. Due to agriculture and farming, the ruins of the church were fully destroyed.

== Family ==
With his wife Chiranna, he had the following children:

* ] an Albanian chroniclers who wrote the ] which has greatly contributed to the knowledge of Albanian medieval history.
* ]
* ]


== References and sources == == References and sources ==

Revision as of 21:03, 25 December 2024

Prince of Muzaka
Gjin II Muzaka
Prince of Muzaka
Lord of Tomorrica
Lord of Deabolis
Coat of arms of the Muzaka family.
Prince of Muzaka
PredecessorAndrea III Muzaka
SuccessorGjon Muzaka
BornTomorrica, Principality of Muzaka
DiedMid-July 1445
Berat Castle
BurialChurch of Saint Mary, Bungë.
SpouseChiranna Mataranga
IssueGjon Muzaka
Maria II Muzaka
Helena Muzaka
DynastyMuzaka
FatherAndrea III Muzaka
MotherChiranna Zenevisi
ReligionEastern Orthodoxy
OccupationSoldier

Gjin II Muzaka was an Albanian nobleman and son of Andrea III Muzaka and Chiranna Zenevisi, Lady of Grabossa. His father came from the wealthy noble Muzaka family whilst his mother came from the noble Zenevisi family and daughter of Albanian lord John Zenevisi.

Life

After the death of his father Andrea III, Gjin was the official heir to his father's throne and became the Lord of Tomorrica and Deabolis, bordering the domains of the noble Arianiti family. According to his son Gjon Muzaka in the Muzaka chronicles, Gjin and his family alongside his mother Chiranna were all “devout christians”. During the League of Lezhë he joined the forces of Skanderbeg against the Ottoman Empire. He fought and died shortly after the siege of Berat in 1445 mid-July. His lands were ultimately taken by Skanderbeg until the end of his revolt where Gjin's son, Gjon Muzaka, an Albanian chronicler, inherited his father's land. This did not last long, as the Ottomans had expelled Gjon from his land and was forced to flee and take refuge in Italy.

Burial

Like his mother Chiranna who built the Holy Trinity Church in Lavdar, Gjin was also a church builder and had constructed a church dedicated to Saint Mary in Bungë and was buried there with his wife Chiranna Zardari. His descendants had also constructed a church dedicated to Saint George. Due to agriculture and farming, the ruins of the church were fully destroyed.

Family

With his wife Chiranna, he had the following children:

References and sources

  1. ^ Allgemeine Encyklopädie der Wissenschaften und Künste. 1868, Hermann Brockhaus, Erste Section A–G, fq. 121
  2. ^ ^ Allgemeine Encyklopädie der Wissenschaften und Künste, 1868, S. 134
  3. Martino Segono di Novo Brdo, vescovo di Dulcigno: un umanista serbo-dalmata del tardo Quattrocento, vita e opere. Istituto storico italiano per il Medio Evo. 1981. fq. 247.
  4. Allgemeine Encyklopädie der Wissenschaften und Künste, 1868, S. 162
  5. Carl Hermann Friedrich Johann Hopf, S. 293
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