Jacob Notaras
Jacob Notaras (Greek: Ιάκωβος Νοταράς) (c. 1439 – c. 1491; Jacob/Iakobos, not Isaac/Isaakios, as is occasionally reported) was the youngest son of the Grand Duke Loukas Notaras. Jacob was said to be an exceptionally beautiful boy who caught the attention of the sultan Mehmed II, in 1453 after the Fall of Constantinople, when the conqueror visited the house of Notaras. Three days afterwards, Loukas Notaras was executed along with his son and son-in-law, while Jacob was reserved for the pleasure of the sultan.[1] Thus, after the execution of his father and brother, Jacob found the sultan’s favour by being added to Mehmed's harem, most likely as his catamite. He stayed in the seraglio until 1460 and then escaped from Adrianopolis to Italy, where he reunited with his three sisters: Anna, Theodora and Euphrosyne. He later married Elizabeth Zampetis, and apparently was unhappy with his personal life. Some claim a direct descent from Loukas Notaras, but the only son who survived was Jacob, who bore no children.
Sources and further reading
The Siege and the Fall of Constantinople in 1453: Historiography, Topography, and Military Studies by Marios Philippides, Walter K. Hanak
References
- ↑ "alio impubere luxui regali reservato" by account of Leonard of Chios, the archbishop of Mytilene, an eye-witness and captive of Constantinople. Atti della Società ligure di storia patria, p.256