Despot or despotes was a senior Byzantine court title that was bestowed on the sons or sons-in-law of reigning emperors, and initially denoted the heir-apparent of the Byzantine emperor.
From Byzantium it spread throughout the late medieval Balkans and was also granted in the states under Byzantine cultural influence, such as the Latin Empire, the Second Bulgarian Empire, the Serbian Empire and its successor states (Bulgarian and Serbian: деспот, romanized: despót), and the Empire of Trebizond. With the political fragmentation of the period, the term gave rise to several principalities termed "despotates" which were ruled either as independent states or as appanages by princes bearing the title of despot; most notably the Despotate of Epirus, the Despotate of the Morea, the Despotate of Do...
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Byzantine imperial flag, 14th century, square.svg
The flag of the late Eastern Roman Empire under the Palaiologos dynasty, as depicted in the Catalan ...
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Paris Gregory gr. 510, f 11 (Bv).From left to right: Alexander (crowned-emperor since 879), Eudokia ...
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А miniature from the Louvre MS. Ivoires 100 manuscript, depicting the Byzantine emperor Manuel II Pa...
Seal of Constantine Doukas Komnenos Palaiologos, despotes and porphyrogennetos.jpg
Constantine Ducas Comnenus Palaeologes, despotes and porphyrogennetos. Late 13th-early 14th centurie...
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The Metropolitan 'M' Stamp.
Σφραγίς Δημητρίου Παλαιολόγου.svg
Seal of the Despot of the Morea, Demetrios Palaiologos