Paul Boua Spata
Paul Boua Spata, also known as Pavlos was an Albanian nobleman who was the Lord of Angelokastron & Naupaktos from 1403 to 1407. He was a member of the Spata family.
Early life & Inheritance
Paul Shpata was the son of Skurra Bua Shpata, an Albanian nobleman who was the Lord of Angelokastron. The identity of his mother remains unknown, and not much is known about his early life.Paul inherited Angelokastron and Naupaktos following the death of his father in 1403, during a time of widespread instability and civil war among the Albanian families of western Greece. His father previously tried to claim the city of Arta after the death of Paul’s uncle Gjin Bua Shpata around 1399-1400. However, he was forced out by a local figure named Vango, who styled himself as a "Serbo-Albano-Bulgaro-Vlach." Although Vango was eventually expelled from the city, it was not restored to Paul's father, Skurra, but instead passed to Muriq Shpata, Gjin's grandson.
Skurra withdrew to Angelokastron, where he held out against increasing pressure from Carlo I Tocco, the ruler of Cephalonia and Leukas. After sustaining serious injuries in the fighting, Skurra died in 1403, and Paul inherited his father's lands.
Conflict
Paul’s leadership began under difficult circumstances. The Spata and Boua clans were divided, and members of each family held scattered territories in the region. These divisions worked in favor of Carlo I Tocco, who used both diplomacy and military force to break Albanian resistance. He drew in local lords with offers of land and titles, secured alliances through marriage-including one between his cousin and Dimo Boua and bribed Muriki Boua, Dimo’s brother and a rival of Paul Spata, to join his cause.Throughout the early 1400s, Tocco led a series of campaigns across Aetolia and Acarnania. His forces captured or raided key sites such as Katochi, Barnako, and Kandeles, tightening their hold on the region. Paul, isolated and outmatched, struggled to defend Angelokastron as more coastal towns fell.
One of the final blows came with the loss of Dragameston and Anatoliko. Dragameston, commanded by Lalthi who was Paul’s brother-in-law through his sister’s marriage, was also taken. While Lalthi escaped, Paul’s sister was captured and sent to Leukas to be held for ransom. Both these cities are critical to maintaining connections with the outside world.
Later Life & Disappearance
With little options left, Paul turned to the Ottoman Empire for military assistance. In 1406, an Ottoman force crossed into western Greece to support him, but the campaign quickly fell apart. Many Ottoman troops drowned attempting to cross the swollen Acheloos River, and the survivors were defeated near Vonitsa. Following the failed campaign, the Ottoman commander Yusuf Beg signed a treaty with Carlo I Tocco, leaving Paul without any meaningful allies.Paul then gave up Angelokastron to the Ottomans and withdrew to Naupaktos, the last remaining stronghold under his control. With Venice already showing interest in the strategically valuable port, Paul entered negotiations.
In May 1407, Paul formally agreed to sell Naupaktos to the Republic of Venice for 1,500 ducats, finalizing the transfer by mid-1408. His brother-in-law Francesco Foscari, a Venetian noble married to his sister Sterina Shpata, may have helped broker the deal. Paul disappears from the historical record after the sale, marking the end of Spata family rule in Aetolia and Acarnania.
By that time, Carlo I Tocco had consolidated control over the entire region. Venetian documents confirm that Angelokastron was under his control by July 1408, and he delegated its administration along with Katochi and the Acheloos valley to his loyal Albanian ally Dimo Boua.