Frankokratia


The Frankish Occupation, also known as the Latin Occupation and, for the Venetian domains, Venetian Occupation, were the collection of primarily French and Italian states, fiefs and colonies that were established by the Partitio terrarum imperii Romaniae on the territory of the partitioned Byzantine Empire following the Sack of Constantinople of 1204 during the Fourth crusade.
The terms and derive from the name given by the Orthodox Greeks to the Western French and Italians who originated from territories that once belonged to the Frankish Empire, as this was the political entity that ruled much of the former Western Roman Empire after the collapse of Roman authority and power. The span of the period differs by region: the political situation proved highly volatile, as the Frankish states fragmented and changed hands, and the Greek successor states re-conquered many areas.
With the exception of the Ionian Islands and some islands or forts that remained in Venetian hands until the turn of the 19th century, the, in some cases temporary, end of the in most Greek lands came with the Ottoman conquest, chiefly in the 14th to 17th centuries.

Latin states

Latin Empire

The Latin Empire, centered in Constantinople and encompassing Thrace and Bithynia, was created as the successor of the Byzantine Empire after the Fourth Crusade, while also exercising nominal suzerainty over the other Crusader principalities. Its territories were gradually reduced to little more than the capital, which was eventually captured by the Empire of Nicaea under the rule of Michael VIII Palaiologos in 1261.
attempts to occupy Corfu and Crete in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade were thwarted by the Venetians. It was only during the 14th century, exploiting the terminal decline of the Byzantine Empire under the Palaiologos dynasty, and often in agreement with the weakened Byzantine rulers, that various Genoese nobles established domains in the northeastern Aegean:
  • The Gattilusi family established a number of fiefs, under nominal Byzantine suzerainty, over the island of Lesbos and later also the islands of Lemnos, Thasos and Samothrace, as well as the Thracian town of Ainos.
  • The Lordship of Chios with the port of Phocaea. In 1304–1330 under the Zaccaria family, and, after a Byzantine interlude, from 1346 and until the Ottoman conquest in 1566 under the Maona di Chio e di Focea company.

    Venetian colonies

The Republic of Venice accumulated several possessions in Greece, which formed part of its Stato da Màr. Some of them survived until the fall of the Republic itself in 1797:
  • Kingdom of Candia, Crete being one of the Republic's most important overseas possessions, it was retained until captured by the Ottomans in the Cretan War.
  • Corfu, was captured by Venice from its Genoese ruler shortly after the Fourth Crusade. The island was soon retaken by the Despotate of Epirus but captured in 1258 by the Kingdom of Sicily. The island remained under Angevin rule until 1386 when Venice reimposed its control, which would last until the end of the Republic itself.
  • Durazzo, captured by the Despotate of Epirus in 1213. The city later became part of the Angevin Kingdom of Albania until it was captured by Karl Thopia and became part of the Principality of Albania. He was succeeded by his son Gjergj Thopia who allied himself to the Venetians and Durazzo officially fell under Venetian control once again after his death 1392.
  • Lefkas, originally part of the Palatine county and the Orsini-ruled Despotate of Epirus, it came under Ottoman rule in 1479, and was conquered by the Venetians in 1684, during the Morean War.
  • Zakynthos, originally part of the Palatine county and the Orsini-ruled Despotate of Epirus, it fell to Venice in 1479
  • Cephalonia and Ithaca, originally part of the Palatine county and the Orsini-ruled Despotate of Epirus, they came under Ottoman rule in 1479 and were conquered by the Venetians in December 1500.
  • Tinos and Mykonos, bequeathed to Venice in 1390.
  • Various coastal fortresses in the Peloponnese and mainland Greece:
  • * Modon and Coron, occupied in 1207, confirmed by the Treaty of Sapienza, and held until taken by the Ottomans in August 1500.
  • * Nauplia, acquired through the purchase of the lordship of Argos and Nauplia in 1388, held until captured by the Ottomans in 1540.
  • * Argos, acquired through the purchase of the lordship of Argos and Nauplia but seized by the Despotate of the Morea and not handed over to Venice until June 1394, held until captured by the Ottomans in 1462.
  • * Athens, acquired in 1394 from the heirs of Nerio I Acciaioli, but lost to the latter's bastard son Antonio in 1402–03, a fact recognized by the Republic in a treaty in 1405.
  • * Parga, port town on the coast of Epirus, acquired in 1401. It was governed as a dependency of Corfu, and remained so even after the end of the Venetian Republic in 1797, finally being ceded by the British to Ali Pasha in 1819.
  • * Lepanto, a port in Aetolia, briefly seized by a Venetian captain in 1390, in 1394 its inhabitants offered to hand it over to Venice, but were rebuffed. Finally sold to Venice in 1407 by its Albanian ruler, Paul Spata, lost to the Ottomans in 1540.
  • * Patras, held in 1408–13 and 1417–19 in lease, for 1,000 ducats per year, from the Latin Archbishop of Patras, who thus hoped to thwart a Turkish or Byzantine takeover of the city.
  • * The Northern Sporades, were Byzantine possessions that came under Venetian rule after the Fall of Constantinople in 1453. They were captured by the Ottomans under Hayreddin Barbarossa in 1538.
  • * Monemvasia, a Byzantine outpost left unconquered by the Ottomans in 1460, it accepted Venetian rule, until captured by the Ottomans in 1540.
  • * Vonitsa on the coast of Epirus, captured in 1684 and held as a mainland exclave of the Ionian Islands until the end of the Republic.
  • * Preveza on the coast of Epirus, occupied during the Morean War, recaptured in 1717 and held as a mainland exclave of the Ionian Islands until the end of the Republic.
  • The entirety of the Peloponnese or Morea peninsula was conquered during the Morean War in the 1680s and became a colony as the "Kingdom of the Morea". It was reconquered by the Ottomans in 1715.