John I Orsini | |
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Count palatine of Cephalonia and Zakynthos | |
Reign | 1303/4 – 1317 |
Predecessor | Richard Orsini |
Successor | Nicholas Orsini |
Spouse | Maria Komnene Doukaina |
Issue | Nicholas John II Guy Margaret |
Italian | Giovanni Orsini |
Dynasty | Orsini (?) |
Father | Richard Orsini |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
John I Orsini (Italian: Giovanni Orsini) was the count palatine of Cephalonia and Zakynthos from 1303 or 1304 to his death in 1317. Married to an Epirote princess, John spent a decade at the Epirote court before succeeding his father, Richard Orsini, as count palatine. As a vassal of the Principality of Achaea, he was involved in its domestic affairs and especially the dynastic dispute between the infante Ferdinand of Majorca and Princess Matilda of Hainaut in 1315–16, and participated in a number of Latin campaigns against Epirus, which he aspired to rule. A year after his death, his son and heir Nicholas Orsini seized Epirus and brought it under the Orsini family's rule.