Donika Arianiti | |||||
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Lady of Albania | |||||
![]() Posthumous engraving by Johann Theodor de Bry | |||||
Consort of Albania | |||||
Tenure | 1451-1468 | ||||
Predecessor | - | ||||
Successor | Theodora Muzaka (1468-1479) | ||||
Born | 1428 Kaninë, Ottoman Empire (modern day Albania) | ||||
Died | 1506 (Aged 78) Valencia, Kingdom of Valencia (modern day Spain) | ||||
Burial | Royal Monastery of the Holy Trinity, Valencia | ||||
Spouse | Skanderbeg | ||||
Issue | John Kastrioti II | ||||
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House | ![]() ![]() ![]() | ||||
Father | Gjergj Arianiti | ||||
Mother | Maria Muzaka | ||||
Religion | Eastern Orthodoxy |
Donika Arianiti, also known as Donika Kastrioti, [a] (born 1428 – died 1506) was an Albanian noblewoman and the spouse of Albanian leader and national hero Skanderbeg. She was the daughter of Gjergj Arianiti, an earlier leader in the ongoing revolt against the Ottomans.
Donika was born in Kaninë, in 1428. Her father, Gjergj Arianiti was a member of the Arianiti family whose domain stretched across the Shkumbin valley and the old Via Egnatia road and reached to the east today's Bitola. Her mother, Maria Muzaka was a member of the Muzaka family whose domain was the Myzeqe region.[1]
A month after the Treaty of Gaeta, on 21 April 1451, Skanderbeg married Donika, and thus strengthened the ties with the Arianiti family,[2] in the Eastern Orthodox Ardenica Monastery,[3][4] in Lushnje, present-day southwestern Albania. Later her sister Angelina married Serbian ruler Stefan Branković. She is venerated as a saint in the Serbian Orthodox Church.[5]
After the Ottoman conquest of Albania, the Kastriotis were given peerage in the Kingdom of Naples.[6] They obtained a feudal domain, the Duchy of San Pietro in Galatina and the County of Soleto (Province of Lecce, Italy).[7] Gjon Kastrioti II, Donika's and Skanderbeg's only child, married Jerina Branković, the daughter of Lazar Branković, Despot of Serbia.[7]