with her sons
Leo VI (left) and
Alexander (right), both called () The original
Greek term
δεσπότης () meant simply 'lord' and was synonymous with
κύριος (). As the Greek equivalent to the Latin , was initially used as a form of address indicating respect. As such it was applied to any person of rank, but in a more specific sense to God (e.g.
Revelation 6:10), bishops and the patriarchs, and primarily the
Roman and
Byzantine Emperors. Occasionally it was used in formal settings, for example on coins (since
Leo III the Isaurian) or formal documents. During the 8th and 9th centuries, co-emperors appear on coinage with the address , but this was still a mark of respect rather than an official title. Senior emperors were also occasionally addressed as . Before the 12th century, the honorific was used interchangeably with the more formal title of
basileus. Although it was used for high-ranking nobles from the early 12th century, the title of despot began being used as a specific court title by
Manuel I Komnenos, who conferred it in 1163 to the future King
Béla III of Hungary, the Emperor's son-in-law and, until the birth of
Alexios II in 1169, heir-presumptive. According to the contemporary Byzantine historian
John Kinnamos, the title of despot was analogous to Béla's Hungarian title of , or heir-apparent. From this time and until the end of the Byzantine Empire, the title of despot became the highest Byzantine dignity, which placed its holders "immediately after the emperor" (
Rodolphe Guilland). Nevertheless, the Byzantine emperors from the
Komnenoi to the
Palaiologoi, as well as the
Latin Emperors who claimed their succession and imitated their styles, continued to use the term in its more generic sense of 'lord' in their personal seals and in imperial coinage. In a similar manner, the holders of the two immediately junior titles of and could be addressed as (). The despot shared with the another appellatory epithet, (, 'most fortunate') or (, 'most fortunate of all'). with his family: empress
Helena Dragaš (right), and three of their sons, the co-emperor
John VIII and the despots
Andronikos and
Theodore During the last centuries of Byzantium's existence, the title was awarded to the younger sons of emperors (the eldest sons were usually crowned as co-emperors, with the title of ) as well as to the emperor's sons-in-law (). The title entailed extensive honours and privileges, including the control of large estates – the domains of Michael VIII's brother
John Palaiologos for instance included the islands of
Lesbos and
Rhodes – to finance their extensive households. Like the junior titles of and however, the title of despot was strictly a courtly dignity, and was not tied to any military or administrative functions or powers. Women could not hold a noble title, but bore the titles of their husbands. Thus the spouse of a despot, the despotess (), had the right to bear the same insignia as he. Among the women of the court, the despotesses likewise took the first place after the empress. The use of the title spread also to the other countries of the Balkans. The
Latin Empire used it to honour the
Doge of Venice Enrico Dandolo and the local ruler of the
Rhodope region,
Alexius Slav. After ca. 1219 it was regularly borne (it is not clear whether the title was awarded by the Emperor or usurped) by the
Venetian podestàs in Constantinople, as the Venetian support became crucial to the Empire's survival. In 1279/80, it was introduced in
Bulgaria to placate the powerful magnate (and later Tsar)
George Terter in 1279/80. During the
Serbian Empire it was widely awarded among the various Serbian magnates, with
Jovan Oliver being the first holder, and it was held by lesser principalities as well, including the self-proclaimed Albanian
despots of Arta. In the 15th century, the Venetian governors of
Corfu were also styled as despots. As the title of despot was conferred by the emperor and usually implied a degree of submission by the awardee, the Palaiologan emperors tried long to persuade the
Emperors of Trebizond, who also claimed the Byzantine imperial title, to accept the title of despot instead. Only
John II of Trebizond and his son
Alexios II, however, accepted the title, and even they continued to use the usual imperial title of in their own domains. With the death of the last Byzantine Emperor
Constantine XI on May 29, 1453, the creation of a despot became irregular. The title was granted by
Pope Paul II to
Andreas Palaiologos, heir to the Byzantine throne in 1465, and by the king of Hungary to the heirs of the
Serbian Despotate. ==Despotates==