Vojislava Kastriot

Vojislava Kastriot ili Vojislava Tribalda je bila albanska princeza koja je krajem 14. i početkom 15. veka živela na Balkanu. Poreklom je iz oblasti Polog u Makedoniji. Poznata je po tome što je bila Skenderbegova majka.

Jovan Muzaka, pripadnik porodice Muzaka iz 15. veka, navodi da je Vojislava pripadala njegovoj plemićkoj porodici Muzaka.[1]

Neki savremeni istoričari smatraju da je Vojislava bila Srpkinja i da je verovatno pripadala porodici Branković, a imena njene dece, koja su skoro sva slovenska, to nedvosmisleno i ukazuju.[2][3][4]

Tvrdnje o Vojislavinom slovenskom poreklu navode i brojni istoričari iz 19. veka [5][6][7] kao i brojni istoričari iz 20. veka[8][9][10][11][12][13][14].

Reference uredi

  1. Accio sappiate, in che modo c'era parente il Signor marchese della Tripalda, ve dico, che l'e per parte de donna... (Know that the Marquis of Tripalda is related to us by a female line); Giovanni Musachi: "Chroniques gréco-romanes inédites ou peu connues", p. 301. [1]
  2. Jazexhi, Olsi (2002) „Another approach towards certain "exported" myths on Albanian historiography between occident and islam” Pisa: Edistudio di Brunetto Casini str. 98 »Scanderbeg ... No matter what the historical facts might have been twisted, he is and will never be accepted from Albanian Muslims as the greatest defender of Christianity against Islâm or as a symbol of Albanian-Serbian brotherhood (since his mother was a Serb woman)..« 
  3. Petrovski, Boban (2006) (Macedonian) Воисава Трибалда (Voisava Tribalda) Skopje p. 9 »"Dokolku ja prifatime ovaa varijanta, spored koja Brankovićite bile gospodari na/vo Polog do početokot na poslednata decenija od XIV vek, vo toj slučaj proizleguva deka Voisava bila ćerka na Grgur ili pak, možebi na Vuk Branković"« 
  4. Schmitt, Oliver Jens (2008) (German) Kosovo: kurze Geschichte einer zentralbalkanischen Landschaft Wien: Bohlau Verlag p. 62 ISBN 978-3-8252-3156-9 »Ein Teil Seiner familie floh zu Skanderbeg, der selbst mit den Brankovići verwandt war. Einen ethnischen Gegensatz zwischen Serben und Albanern kann man in der Elite Mittelalter nicht festsellen - die engen Verbindungen des serbischen und albanischen orthodoxen Adels allein schon standen dem ent gegen: Skanderbegs Mutter war wohl eine Brankovic, und sein Sohn Ivan heiratete eine Brankovic (Irene).« 
  5. Hopf, Karl (1873) „Despotes et dynastes d'Epire et de Thessalie” Chroniques gréco-romanes inédites ou peu connues Berlin: Weidmann p. 533 »"Voisava Tripalda fille de seigneur (Serbe) de Polog"« 
  6. Oncken, Wilhelm (1883) (German) Allgemeine geschichte in einzeldarstellungen G. Grote p. 560 »vermählt mit Voisava, Tochter des serbischen Herrn von Polog,« 
  7. Hertzberg, Gustav Friedrich (1883) Geschichte der Byzantiner und des Osmanischen Reiches G. Grote pp. 560-561 »nämlich der sogenannte Skanderbeg oder vielmehr Georg Kastriota, persönlich ein Mann halb- slawischen Blutes. ... der Grasschast Mal bestätigt, vermählt mit Voisava, Tochter des serbischen Herrn von Polog, stärkte zu Ansang des« 
  8. Vučičević, Milenko M. (1904) (Serbian) Istorija srpskoga naroda za srednje škole 1 Dositej Obradović p. 286 OCLC 25320399. Pristupljeno July 7, 2011 »Иванова жена, а мајка Скендербегова Воисава, била је кћи српскога господара од Полога. (Ivan's wife, and mother of Skanderbeg, Voisava, was daughter of Serbian lord of Polog.« 
  9. Bryce, James (1907) Hans Ferdinand Helmolt ur. The World's History: South-eastern and eastern Europe 5 William Heinemann p. 225 »Voisava, the Servian princess« 
  10. Gegaj, Athanase (1937), L'Albanie et l'Invasion turque au XVe siècle, Universite de Louvain, OCLC 652265147, »Le nom Voisava est certes d'origine slave, mais on ne peut en conclure, comme le fait JORGA, Brève histoire, ...Jireček, Geschichle der Bulgaren, t. II, p. 368, affirme aussi l'origine slave des Castriota tout en rejetant pour ce qui concerne Branilo (page 36)« 
  11. Creighton, Mandell Justin Winsor, Samuel Rawson Gardiner, Reginald Lane Poole, Sir John Goronwy Edwards (1938) The English historical review 53 Longman »Coming to Skanderbeg's origin, he rejects Hopf's and Jireček's view that it was Slav, contending that it was purely Albanian, and that the family name, Castriota, was assumed from the place Kastri, whereas the original surname was Mazreku, taken from a village so called. But Skanderbeg's mother had Slav name, and the epithet "Tripalda" given to her is a corruption of the tribal name Triballi, which the pedantic Byzantine historians applied to the Serbs. Moreover, if he had no connection to Serbia, why should he have given two villages to Chilindar, which the author wrongly asserts (p 43, n 1) to be a convent in Albania, but which the document he cites expressly states to have been the famous Serbian monastery on Mount Athos, immemorially connected with Serbian kings, medieval and modern?« 
  12. (Society of Historians of Montenegro), Društvo istoričara SR Crne Gore (1949) (Serbian) Istorijski zapisi 2 Yugoslavia: Istorijski institut u Titogradu p. 82 »Ђурађ Кастриотић Скендербег...: био је он син арбанашког властелина Ивана Кастриота и једне Српкиње из Полога, ...(George Kastriot Skanderbeg...:he was a son of albanian lord Ivan and one Serb woman from Polog...« 
  13. Vukanović, Tatomir (1971) (Serbian) Vranje. Pristupljeno April 8, 2011 »...Voisavom, kćerkom jednog sprskog vlastelina iz Donjeg pologa u Makedoniji (područje grada Tetova)... Voisava, fille d'un seigneur féodal serbe de la région de Donji Polog en Macédoine.« 
  14. Zhelyazkova, Antonina (2000). „Albania and Albanian Identities” (English) (html). International Center for Minority Studies and Intercultural Relations. Arhivirano iz originala na datum 2011-01-10. Pristupljeno January 10, 2011. »It is a curious circumstance that Skanderbeg's mother was a Slav woman, according to some sources a Bulgarian named Voisava, a fact recorded in an anonymous Venetian chronicle: "Huic uxor fuit Voisava, Pologi Domini filia, est autem Pologum oppidum in Macedoniae et Bulgarie confinibus"«